ISIS knot?
Legionnaire Soldiers?
Terra-cotta Chinese Soldiers with scarves?
Isadora Angela Duncan
Russian: Айседора Есенинa (Дункан)
Birthdate: May 27, 1877
Birthplace: San Francisco, San Francisco County, California, United States
Death: September 14, 1927 (50)
(Neck famously broken when her red shawl caught on the spoke of the car she was riding in.)
Sanfermin red scarves festival?
The red scarf is a neckerchief worn by Young Pioneers of several countries during the socialist (“communist”) era. In the Soviet Union it was known as pionerskiy galstuk (пионерский галстук, i. e. pioneer’s neckerchief), in Vietnam as khăn quàng đỏ (red scarf), in China as hong lingjin (紅領巾, red scarf), in Cuba as pañoleta roja (red scarf), and in Hungary as úttörőnyakkendő (pioneer’s neckerchief). Blue scarves were also used by youngsters before coming of age to wear the red one, and are still seen in some countries.
It remains in use by the Young Pioneers of China, Vietnam, North Korea, Laos and Cuba, and — unofficially, on occasions — in many other countries[citation needed], such as Russia, Venezuela, Zimbabwe, Belarus, Ukraine, Finland etc. In China, the scarf is emblematic of blood of revolutionary martyrs, as recalled in Red Scarf Park and the title of Red Scarf Girl by Ji-li Jiang about her experiences during the Cultural Revolution. In Cuba, the scarf is worn by schoolchildren from first to sixth grade.[1]
Former Khmers Rouge sympathizers, or families who supported this regime, are still present in parts of Cambodia. Those people do not mind wearing a red krama.
Red scarves have been historically associated with war, death, and the blood of revolutionaries, particularly socialism.