Only local flags to fly from Old World’s poles
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The American flag flying in front of the Old World
Village on Center Avenue will soon be joined by banners representing the
state of California and the city of Huntington Beach.
The village’s five-person board of directors, which acts as a
homeowners association for its tenants, unanimously approved a policy
Oct. 25 that outlines out how flags will be reviewed and displayed. The
move comes after one Old World shop owner and resident claimed
discrimination because an Israeli flag she raised on the village’s poles
to honor the Jewish High Holy Days was removed.
“We basically decided to fly only the city, state and national flags
right now, while allowing residents to fly their own flags in front of
their businesses,” board member Richard Lewis said.
The national banners reflecting the village’s German theme, and others
symbolizing the countries represented by the village’s specialty shops,
were primarily flown on five flagpoles that stand along the shopping
center’s Center Avenue face.
Boutique owner Michele Weiss raised the Israeli flag on Sept. 29. Old
World officials said they took it down because she did not get approval
from the village’s governing board to fly it. The flag poles, directors
said, are public property, and flags flown on them must be approved by
the board.
Weiss said she was the victim of anti-Semitic prejudice and that the
flag was taken down because she’s Jewish in a German-themed village. She
hired an attorney Friday to look into other claims of prejudice.
In a special meeting held Oct. 7, village directors discussed Weiss’s
concerns and took down all national banners except the American flag
until a clear-cut flag policy could be developed at last week’s board
meeting.
Lewis said that while only three flags will be flown out front,
residents and shop owners can display flags in front of their businesses,
as long as requests are submitted to the village’s flag and architectural
committees, with final approval of the board of directors.
“I don’t think we’ll refuse anyone, and it will bring some color to
the village,” he said.
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