TheStraw Hat Pirates' Jolly Roger is apirate flag predominantly featured in the JapaneseOne Piecemanga andits franchise, wherein it is used to identify theStraw Hat Pirates, the pirate crew featuring the series' protagonists, who often fight for liberation of oppressed people.
It has become a symbol for youth-led protest movements globally such as theAugust 2025 Indonesian protests where people began using the flag in lieu of the national flag as a form of protest against the government, and the practice was emulated in other countries. Notably, the flag saw widespread use duringprotests in Nepal andMadagascar which overthrew their respective governments. The flag has also seen use in protests in other Asian and African countries, Europe, South America, and the United States.
The flag is a fictionalJolly Roger, depicting a cartoonishskull with two crossbones and astraw hat. InEichiro Oda'sOne Piece series, each pirate crew has its own distinct Jolly Roger that reflects its traits and beliefs. Although the flag was originally drawn by the main series protagonistMonkey D. Luffy, his poor sketch led one of his crewmatesUsopp to redesign it.[1]
The flag’s anti-authoritarian usage is a reference to a major storyline involving the fictionalworld government, which controls most of the manga’s locations, and the Straw Hat Pirates’ struggles to fight back, while subsequently hunting for the titular treasure.[2] As described byCNN, "the flag symbolizes Luffy’s quest to chase his dreams, liberate oppressed people, and fight the autocratic World Government".[3] Multiple academic works have analysed how the manga draws parallels to real world politics and authoritarianism.[4][5][6]
The flag had been used in protests in Indonesia as early as October 2023 inYogyakarta, during protests against theGaza War.[7][8] Student protesters in Indonesia begun flying the flag again in February 2025.[9] Truck drivers began flying the Straw Hat Pirates' flag in late July 2025 to protest the prohibition of ODOL (over dimension, overload) trucks throughout several cities in Java, ongoing since 19 June 2025.[10][11][12]
The flag came into prominence during the2025 Indonesian anti-government protests which started in the weeks leading up toIndependence Day on 17 August.[13]In July, PresidentPrabowo Subianto had called on Indonesians to fly the red and whitenational flag to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the country'sindependence. Following the president's speech an apparel store received "thousands of orders" for the Jolly Roger flag, because "The anime reflects the injustice and inequality that Indonesians experience".[14]
During large-scale protests and demonstrations were organized byGeneration Z against government corruption in Nepal during September 2025, the flag became a key symbol.[15][3] Protesters displayed the flag with slogans criticizing the luxurious lifestyles of politicians' children on social media.[3] Posts featuring the flag went viral on Nepalese social media, and its adoption quickly spread among protesters. One Nepalese protester interviewed byThe Kathmandu Post remarked that the flag's use in Indonesian protests "surely popularised its use in protests in Nepal".[16] As the government ofK. P. Sharma Oli was toppled by the protests, protesters hung the flag at the gates of theSingha Durbar palace as it burned.[3]
Malagasy protesters in September–October 2025 used the symbol as a gesture against the government for inadequatewater andpower, with protesters using a variant of the flag with a pink-and-green satroka hat, traditional of theBetsileo people, in place of the regular straw hat.[17][18] The icon was adopted by social media accounts associated with protesters.[9] By 11 October, the militaryCAPSAT unit had refused to fire on the protesters and theylaunched a coup the following day, resulting in the flight and later impeachment of PresidentAndry Rajoelina. Protesters proceeded to hang the flag at the capitalAntananarivo's Place du 13 Mai.[18] Some protest leaders, opposed to the military takeover, began distributing T-shirts with the Malagasy variant of the flag to protesters after the coup.[19]
The flag was flown by some protesters during theTrillion Peso March which was against corruption and the"ghost projects" controversy in the Philippines,[22][23] and by university students protesting lifetime pensions for parliament members inEast Timor.[24] During another protest in the Philippines on 12 October, a motorcycle rider carrying the flag was confronted by other protestors who suspected him of being aprovocateur, and he was escorted away by police.[25]
During the French anti-governmentBloquons tout protests in September 2025 after the fall of theBayrou government, some protesters carried the flag.[26][22]
The flag was present during the protests against pension reforms inPeru, a reform promoted by the government ofDina Boluarte. Specifically, the flag was present again during the protest on September 24 inPlaza San Martín, Lima.[27] Anti-government protesters inAsuncion,Paraguay in late September along with protesters atLa Paz demanding an audit for the2025 Bolivian general election in October also carried the flag.[28][29]
The Guardian described the flag as "a symbol of defiance and hope for gen Z protesters" which has "resonated across borders".[45] Tokoro Ikuya (床呂郁哉), professor ofTokyo University of Foreign Studies who studiesJapanese popular culture, indicated that the flag serves as "an icon conveys a message that could be understood beyond minor different positions".[46]
^Insolia, Mattia."La marea umana di Milano per Gaza: «Vi aiutiamo noi a definire bambino»".Domani (in Italian). Retrieved8 October 2025. [THE GEN Z There are many high school students, university students. Many have a kefiah around their necks or Luffy's flag from One Piece, the manga; it is the symbol of Gen Z for protests about Palestine. ... They are between sixteen and nineteen years old and, aware that the future is theirs, ... they took to the streets because they don't want it, this world that previous generations insist on trying to stick in their heads.]
^時事通信 外信部 (28 September 2025)."ワンピース海賊旗、「抵抗の象徴」 アジア各国のデモに".時事ドットコム (in Japanese). Retrieved3 October 2025.日本発のポップカルチャーの東南アジアへの越境や受容を研究する東京外国語大の床呂郁哉教授は……海賊旗が「細かい立場の違いを超えて理解可能なメッセージを伝え得るアイコンとして機能した」と指摘した。