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Belt Buckle Peace Sign - with colorful floral pattern
Colors: Multicolor
Body: Pewter
Fits belts up to 1 1/2"
Peace signs and symbols express the wish and the demand for peace and international understanding. They are especially widespread in the peace movement as a signal of a pacifist or anti-militarist self-image.
CND sign - Probably the most significant peace sign was designed in 1958 by the British artist Gerald Holtom on behalf of the British Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) for the world's first Easter march from London to the nuclear weapons research center in Aldermaston. According to Holtom, the symbol represents a combination of two signs from the waving alphabet, namely N for nuclear and D for disarmament. According to another - by Gerald Holtom himself - circulated story of the origin of the sign, it represents a stylized human being with - in the face of a world staring at weapons - helplessly spread arms downwards. The enclosing circle symbolizes the entire earth.
Body: Pewter
Fits belts up to 1 1/2"
Peace signs and symbols express the wish and the demand for peace and international understanding. They are especially widespread in the peace movement as a signal of a pacifist or anti-militarist self-image.
CND sign - Probably the most significant peace sign was designed in 1958 by the British artist Gerald Holtom on behalf of the British Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) for the world's first Easter march from London to the nuclear weapons research center in Aldermaston. According to Holtom, the symbol represents a combination of two signs from the waving alphabet, namely N for nuclear and D for disarmament. According to another - by Gerald Holtom himself - circulated story of the origin of the sign, it represents a stylized human being with - in the face of a world staring at weapons - helplessly spread arms downwards. The enclosing circle symbolizes the entire earth.