Our Coat of Arms

 

Four vanes of the windmill turn counter-clockwise. Number four symbolises the incarnation, corporeity, realisation of ideas, practical human activity. Movement against the flow of time symbolises destabilisation, vitiation of the order, not only of the one arbitrarily defined by humans but in the first place of the moral and spiritual order, which has been revealed. Diagonal orientation of the mill vanes is an antithesis to the ontological repleteness of the horizontal axis of the cross. The windmill wheel is an embodied human spuriousness coming from a lack of morality and from the rejection of its source.

 

Three arrows aim at the axle of the windmill wheel. Number three symbolises ideality, trinity, the triad of spiritual virtues (faith, hope and love), the triad of quixotic virtues (truth, selflessness and perseverance) and also the number of QQ founders. The arrows sybmolise Quixote Quest itself. They are less powerful then spinning windmill vanes, their sporadic actions break down on the wheels of human spuriousness driven by the wind of human weakness, resignation, pragmatism, and the reluctance to take a risk. The meaning of those seemingly meaningless activities resides not in a temporary triumph in an uneven struggle but in referring to the spirituality, to virtues which, if accepted, may give proper aiming to the world order. The arrows aim at the axis of the movement as well as to the point of cohesion of the wheel not only in an eschatological hope for concording and harmony with the divine order but also in a hope in unifying the threesome with the foursome in the replenteness of spiritual and incarnated existence.