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Yellow Badge




A yellow badge, also referred to as a '''Jewish badge''', is a mandatory mark or a piece of cloth of specific geometric shape, worn on the outer garment in order to distinguish a person of certain religion or ethnicity in public. It is traditionally associated with the persecution of Jew s. In some countries a badge was accompanied or replaced by identifying garb or hat. In the Middle Ages clothes worn by different groups of people were regulated by Sumptuary Law .

The color yellow had been maligned since feudal times. Horses that were yellowish were considered worthless throughout society (as seen in the obsolete phrase, ''to curry Fauvel'', a conventional name of a yellow horse). All other colors were used by knights on their shields, so yellow was left to brand the Jews.


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) being massacred by Crusaders]]

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  • 1940 The Dane s undertake heroic efforts to shelter their Jews and help them escape from the Nazis to neutral Sweden . A popular legend portrays king Christian X Of Denmark wearing an armband as he makes his daily morning horseback ride through the streets of Copenhagen , followed by non-Jewish Danes responding to their king's example, thus preventing the Germans from identifying Jewish citizens and rendering the Nazi order ineffective. In the book '' Queen In Denmark '' by Anne Wolden-Ræthinge , the Queen Margrethe II Of Denmark says of the legend, "It is a beautiful and symbolic story, but it is not true… To me, the truth is an even greater honor for our country than the myth."

  • 1995 Hindus living in Afghanistan forced to wear badges to distinguish themselves.


In the Dhimmi Dress codes, forcing all Jews to wear a yellow badge, were sometimes—but not always—enforced, so that dhimmis would be visibly distinct from Muslims. The practice is not found in the Qur'an or Hadith .


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