Gandhi is the most international of all Indian faces in the world of stamps.
Besides India, 80 countries, from Antigua to Zambia, have issued some 250 stamps
on the Mahatma.
Outside India, it was the United States that became the first country to
issue Gandhi stamps. On January 26, 1961, a set of two stamps was released as
part of the Champions of Liberty Series. Congo followed in 1967.
But it was the Gandhi Centenary in 1969 that saw a flurry of stamps being
issued in honor of the Mahatma. Over 40 countries, including Great Britain,
commemorated the centenary by issuing stamps. In London, the British
government’s decision sparked off a debate in Parliament, with several MPs
questioning the wisdom of philatelically honoring the man who caused the sun to
set on the British Empire. But it was Gandhi who carried the day and Biman
Mullick, a British citizen of Indian origin, designed his adopted country’s
philatelic salute to Gandhi, which, incidentally, was adjudged the best at the
International Gandhi Stamp Exhibition in Calcutta in 1972.
One of the noteworthy Gandhi Centenary issues is a set of six stamps and
miniature sheet released by Mauritius. And Poland, by issuing a commemorative
postcard, became the first country outside India to honor Gandhi on its postal
stationery. This was the only non-Indian postal stationery item on the subject
till 1997, when Romania brought out a commemorative envelope. Myanmar (then
Burma) issued the first commemorative postmark outside India, followed within
days by Czechoslovakia and Luxembourg. The Gandhi Centenary issues of Bhutan
(two stamps) and Somalia (three stamps) were printed at the India Security
Press.
The philatelic world didn’t lose interest in Gandhi after his birth
centenary celebrations got over. On his 30th death anniversary year, 1978, Mali
released a stamp to honor the Mahatma. In 1988, Sri Lanka paid homage to Gandhi
on his 40th death anniversary. A number of countries observed his 50th death
anniversary. Richard Attenborough’s successful film, Gandhi, has been featured
on a stamp from Nicaragua in a series on 100 years of cinema. Gandhi is shown
playing Holi on a stamp from Guyana issued in 1995 as part of that country’s
Holidays of the World series. The 1989 Nehru Centenary issues of Maldives,
Mauritius and Grenada also show Gandhi with Nehru.
Great Britain featured Gandhi in a postmark issued on March 9,1983, on the
occasion of Commonwealth Day. On June 7, 1993, South Africa marked the centenary
of the Pietermartizburg railway station incident, which was a turning point in
Gandhi’s life, for he was thrown out of the first-class compartment though he
had a valid ticket for it. On July 20, 1997, a special postmark was provided in
Chicago to mark the naming of a road after the Mahatma. That was the third
occasion when an American postmark centered around Gandhi – the earlier
occasions were 1971 and 1978. Brazil (1972), Germany (1978, 1986) and San Marino
(1986, 1988) are the other countries to have issued commemorative postmarks
featuring Gandhi.
Then came Gandhi’s 125th birth anniversary, commemorated by Kazakhstan and
South Africa, followed by the Golden Jubilee, when Gandhi figured again in the
stamps issued by Chad, Turkmenistan, Venezuela, Bhutan and Cuba to felicitate
India on its 50 years of independence. And the Indian Prime Minister’s visit
to Uganda in 1997 provided an opportunity to the host country to bring out a set
of two stamps and one miniature sheet depicting Gandhi.
But the most coveted philatelic item centering around Gandhi is the official
envelope sent registered by air mail to India from the Second Indian Round Table
Conference in London in 1931. That was the only Round Table Conference, of the
three held, that the Mahatma had attended. Incidentally, a temporary post-office
had been set up exclusively for the conferences and it used a special postmark.
Clearly, in the philatelic world, the Mahatma enjoys an unprecedented
presence internationally. It’s a position that doesn’t seem likely to be equaled
by any other Indian in the foreseeable future.