Celebrating Disability Pride: The Story Behind the Disability Pride Flag
This month, The Access Center for Independent Living (ACIL) is highlighting Disability Pride by telling the story of the Disability Pride Flag.
Flags are important symbols that show awareness, unity, pride, and acceptance, and the Disability Pride Flag does just that.
How the Flag Began
According to The Accessible Stall Podcast, in 2019, Ann Magill, a writer with Cerebral Palsy, created the flag based on her life experiences in New York and Virginia. Ann was inspired to design the flag after attending a poorly recognized event for the 20th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). She felt disappointed that it was held in a basement of her local Center for Independent Living and said, “Damn it, I want a parade. I want a flag. I want a flag to wave.” This idea stayed with her for years.
A Call for Change
Six years later, on the ADA anniversary, Ann heard about a tragic event affecting people with disabilities in Japan, which didn’t get much attention in the news. This event pushed her to think, “We need a flag. We need to be visible.” This started her three-year journey to design the Disability Pride Flag.
The Design Process
Ann first imagined a white flag with a black triangle and a rainbow shining through it. But she realized too much white might suggest surrender, so she made the flag all black with zigzag lines to show the challenges people with disabilities face. Her friends liked the design, but Ann wanted more opinions, so she shared it online, where it got a lot of attention.
Improving the Flag
Some people online said the design was hard on those with visual sensitivities. Ann listened to their feedback and changed the colors to be softer, straightened the stripes, and rearranged them for people with color blindness. She believes the new design truly represents the disability community. Even though she copyrighted it, she left it in the public domain for anyone to use and adapt. The updated flag, with a charcoal gray background and five muted diagonal stripes, stands for solidarity, identity, and resistance against discrimination.
What the Stripes Mean
– Red Stripe: Physical disabilities
– Gold Stripe: Neurodiversity
– White Stripe: Invisible and undiagnosed disabilities
– Blue Stripe: Emotional and psychiatric disabilities
– Green Stripe: Sensory disabilities