COVID pandemic: A turbulent cove on a straight coastline

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The COVID years, 2020-2022 were unprecedented, not only for healthcare, livelihoods, but also for philately. Many country of the world issued COVID postage stamp, in a short span of time. Some of them depicted the struggle, others heroism, courage and eventually overcoming the pandemic through vaccines. Unlike global postage stamps on malaria, HIV or Tuberculosis, COVID stamps did not have any single logo or a symbol. None-the-less, these stamps are a testament to a unified message from mankind.

Greenland issued this postage stamp on 10 August 2020. World was literally exhausted during Covid pandemic years from 2020-2022
World before COVID: A straight coastline

Beginning of 2019 was quite oblivious to the coming times. We had extended pains of terrorism, Syrian civil war, human displacements, Donald Trump, Brexit, environmental pollution, and anti-establishment protests from the previous years. On the global health front, 2018 Ebola epidemic had passed into 2019. We believed that containment, isolation, and white-plastic coveralls were a thing, only for Africa. Meanwhile, philatelists from around the world had gathered in Wuhan, China in June 2019 for another World stamp exhibition. It was quite a straight coastline. COVID virus was probably merrily multiplying in bats, and a turbulent human pandemic was far away from our wildest imagination.

Wuhan cancellations, Wuhan World Philately exhibition, 11-17 June 2019
Beginnings of a turbulent cove

Beginnings of COVID are still shrouded in mystery. It all started in Wuhan wet-market, or maybe somewhere else. In far-east and across South-East Asia, markets are wet (that sell fresh produce) or dry (that sell kitchen-ware, food-grain etc). Probably the virus jumped species from one of the exotic animals here, or it was an inadvertent or a deliberate leak from a Wuhan lab. We know of first reported COVID infections from December of 2019. Subsequent back-projections put it at-least a month earlier in October-November of the same year.

Wet markets in Postage stamps. Three stamps from a set from Hong-Kong (2017). Another from a set of Stamps from Singapore (2017)
World knew it first from a whistle-blower

As 2019 was nearing an end, patients with fever, breathlessness and cough had already crowded hospitals in Wuhan, China. All epidemic concerns were however relegated only to internal memos. Li Wenliang, a Wuhan Ophthalmologist was brave enough to warn other medicos on WeChat. Contrary to his expectations, Li was accused of spreading false rumours. Police made him sign an apology on 3rd January 2020. He went back to work, only to himself catch COVID five days later. WeChat forwards broke news of a serious infection to the world. WHO declared it as a public health emergency much later in January. Li succumbed to virus on 6th February 2020.

This may well be the second postage stamp issued on containment of COVID-19, on 7th May 2020. The first one was issued on 18 March 2020 by Iran, Internet link here
Three days after the Morocco issue, UAE issued its COVID stamp on 10 May 2020. The postage stamp and its cover identify various personnel engaged in containment efforts to control the spread of the pandemic.
Chinese se-tenant pair stamp on COVID warriors was issued on 11 May 2020. The Pandemic that started from China was over in the country at this time. Note the backdrop of the first stamp which shows a flying aeroplane, and a boat. backdrop of the second stamp depicts a scene from the hospital. Health-personnel in white cover-alls are seen entering the red-triangle – a containment zone
World becomes aware of COVID

Early reports of epidemic were mixed. Medical journal, Lancet published a first report on 41 Wuhan patients. It appeared to many as a regular respiratory virus. Soon we woke up to news of strict containment measures in China. Within weeks, aided by international travel, virus spread across continents. Countries like Iran, Italy, France, and New York in US were staring at their first COVID-deaths.

Bosnia issued this postage stamp on 9th June 2020. Virus attempts to breach a wall, which a health worker is trying to contain.
A postage stamp from Georgia 18 June 2020, similar in design to the Bosnia stamp – More people and fewer viruses though

By the time WHO declared COVID as a pandemic on 11th March 2020, all countries in the world were already in turbulence. Livelihoods were on verge of being wiped out. No-one would have imagined that in next two years, COVID would cause between 1.8 and 3 million deaths.

Tajikistan Postage stamp 22 June 2020. Shows all the collaborative efforts that were in place in various countries as the Pandemic raged
Oman faces Corona, Minature sheet Oman, 22 Jun 2020
Masks of all designs were everywhere. Postage stamp from Czech republic issued on 24 June 2020
The Virus and its impact
A postage stamp from Austria 30 October 2020, tries to explain relative size of the virus, and how far each person needs to be from another to keep infection prevention social distance.
Postage stamp from Macau, 24 June 2024 indicates resolve of the healthcare worker
Miniature sheet and a Postage stamp from Macau, 24 June 2024 shows health team engaged in Pandemic c ontrol

New organisms wreck havoc. This is no better explained than in the Faroe Islands. These islands, located between Iceland and Norway have seen populations wiped out with introduction of new infections. A leading medical journal describes the islands as a “pilgrim site for epidemics” These socially distanced islands teach us, that new infections come with a large number of infections, and a high mortality.

Faroe Islands postage stamp depicting COVID-19 infection and ILA-Virus infection. ILA Virus infection in fishes has had a huge economic consequence in the Faroe Islands. Read commentary about ILA, and a unique perspective of COVID.This postage stamp was issued on 5 February 2021

Thereafter populations adapt, they develop immunity, and transmission reduces. History teaches us that epidemics end when we get used to them – biologically, politically, and psychologically. While epidemics end, its causative organism becomes one of the many we live with.

Austria, mask shaped postage stamp, 16 September 2021
COVID warriors and lock-down
A miniature sheet depicting scenes from Lock-down through eyes of a child, Issued 2 July 2020
Miniature sheet with six postage stamps issued by Brazil on 8 July 2020, identified Health team as well as service providers in solidarity to fight covid pandemic

Many countries in the world imposed lockdowns. Trains, planes, buses, cars, shops, malls, hotels, restaurants, offices, businesses were all closed. Hospitals and health systems had only a little time to prepare.

A set of two gutter pair stamps, was issued by Taiwan on 21 July 2020
Global solidarity, Senegal 20 July 2020
The same design was used by Burundi, in its 2021 postal issue
Personal Protection measures

Hospitals had to prepare facilities, equipped with masks, coveralls, goggles, gloves, oxygen, respirators. Countries also had to ramp up RT-PCR tests. Swabbing, testing, PCR, and even Ct values became household names. Patients with infection were already scared, and many were bundled into hospitals and containment zones. Anyone they would find in these zones, was donning goggles, masks, and coveralls – probably scaring them further.

French Polynesia issued a colorful mask postage stamp on 31 July 2020

COVID was not easy for health-care workers either. They were first to face loads of virus, delivering care while protecting themselves. Many doctors, nurses, and paramedics were themselves infected with a disease, that did not have a definite cure.

United Nations Covid issue came on 11 August 2020. This was a set of six stamps with preventive messaging
A set of four stamps from Island Nation of Tuvalu issued on 11 August 2020
Thailand, 14 August 2020
A set of three stamps in this miniature sheet from Kosovo, 14 August 2020

Multitude of others had to sweat-it-out in cumbersome coveralls – dehydrated and tired. Vision clouded in fogged goggles, and manual dexterity compromised in double-gloved hands were other frustrations to handle.

First day cover (17th August 2020) from Indonesia, depicts health-care workers involved in care of a covid-patient.
A set of three stamps from Indonesia (17/08/2020). These stamps depict health-care workers, logistic-industry workers, and technologies used during lockdowns
A set of four child-art Covid stamps from Alderney 19 August 2020
Slovak republic mask and droplet postage stamp 21 August 2020
Many front lines in COVID

COVID frontline extended much beyond hospitals. We had to maintain logistics for medicines, and laboratory supplies. As lockdowns were imposed, logistics were also needed for food, grocery, and other supplies. Sanitation agencies had to clean-up all public places, sometimes with disinfectants sprays. Policemen, were entrusted not only with maintenance of containment zones, but also with helping out those entrapped in them.

Circular stamps in a Miniature sheet, issue from Tajikistan dated 27 August 2020
World at a stand-still
Healthcare workers, France, 14 September 2024
Postal employees and Police, France, 14 September 2024
Industrial workers, France, 14 September 2024
A set of six postage stamps from Portugal on role of Posts during COVID pandemic
Thailand 9 October 2021. Postage during COVID, World Post day stamp

Across the world we had closed down schools, and colleges. Some of these for longer than a year. About 94% of all learners faced school closures. Many industries struggled to keep up production.

Spain 1 October 2020. Theme of this postage stamp was solidarity
Kyrgyzstan 2 October 2020

Tourism, hospitality, cinema and recreation sectors were in recession. Global trade became tardy, and shipping containers piled up on ports.

A miniature sheet and set of four stamps from Sri Lanka 9 October 2020. Saving the nation from Covid virus infection. Sri Lanka is dependent on tourism, an industry that collapsed as a result of pandemic.
Turk Cyprus postage stamp, 19 November 2020
COVID Warriors
A miniature sheet – A set of four stamps from India – A salute to COVID warriors 24 December 2020
First day cover of the Indian Covid-19 warrior postage stamp 24 December 2020
Bangladesh issued its COVID postage stamp on 19 May 2021. A traveled first day cover

Prices of all commodities across the globe increased. Lost jobs and dwindled incomes have not yet recovered. We all were witness to a pan-recession amidst a pandemic.

Postage stamp from Malta on COVID Heroes, 29 January 2021

India alone has more than 1.8 crore COVID warriors. Globally all COVID warriors kept the systems running – witness to the devastation all around them. COVID tested human resilience to its extreme.

Israel 9 February 2021. The first day cover and postage stamp show a drive-thru testing center
Andorra 19 January 2021, as first wave was coming to an end in most countries, and a vaccine was now available, the atmosphere was Jubilant
A set of five postage stamps from Australia, 16 February 2021 on its front line heroes
COVID Vaccination: Beginning of the end-game

Towards the end of year 2020, scientists had developed and tested first set of vaccines. We had a vaccine in less than a year of the first reported infection. This was a first in human history.

Indonesia, COVID vaccination, 26 February 2021
Se-tenant pair from Algeria, 27 February 2021, please note that vaccine is now trying to destroy the virus
Moldova, 25 February 2021 on 125 years of its infectious disease clinic

As of September 2022, more than 12 billion doses of all COVID vaccines have been administered globally. These numbers are regularly updated on WHO dashboard.

Two special covers issued by Turkey on 11 March 2021, completion of first year of pandemic in the country. The cancellation below shows a vaccine against COVID.
Screenshot
Thanks to all heath-care workers. A set of four stamps and a special cover from Armenia, 16 April 2021
A set of eight stamps from Philippines, promoting COVID vaccination in various populations. Postage stamp dated 16 September 2021

Today there are a total of 34 COVID vaccines, 11 of these are listed by WHO.

Indigenous vaccine from Indonesia, Postage stamp dated 28 December 2021
A set of four stamps, Kosovo 10 August 2021. Protection from Vaccine
Spain 18 June 2021, COVID-19 vaccine supplies for the refugees through UNHCR
Protection from Vaccine, Bandage shaped stamp from Austria 15 March 2022
Postage stamp from Serbia, promoting COVID vaccination, 1 March 2022
Importance of vaccination, Portugal 17 October 2022
Portugal, 17 October 2022
Indian Vaccination Drive

India rolled out its vaccination drive on 16th January 2021. This fully public funded drive achieved 100 crore (1 billion) doses in less than 10 months on 31st October 2021. India released special postal covers to mark both these landmark occasions. Today, on 2nd October 2022, India had administered 218 crore (2.18 billion) doses, vaccinating more than 1.03 billion individuals. This is highest number of COVID vaccinations globally.

COVID vaccination and Indigenous Covaxin was also a theme of Department of Health Research Postage stamp (16th January 2022) – One year of vaccination drive.

Today we seemed to have crossed the turbulent cove, and have moved ahead, probably again on a straight coastline. There is a need to celebrate humanity and its resilience. We all need to thank all warriors, scientists, and historic developments in medical science for an incredible pandemic response. While, we lost many lives, but we have also emerged stronger.

Tribute to all who helped fight COVID: Postal Gallery
Miniature sheet, Singapore 16 September 2021
From a set of stamps from Singapore Front-line heros – Doctors nurse, and a swabber, 16 August 2021.
Frontline heroes – A set of stamps from Singapore 16 August 2021 Food hawkers, food delivery personnel, supermarket cashiers, cleaners, bus drivers, teachers, and postmen
Cover of the special commemorative pack, Singapore 2021
Malaysia Tribute stamp, 9 September 2021
Block of four stamps, Russia 24 August 2021
Kyrgyzstan 30 December 2020, COVID Heroes in action
A set of ten postage stamps from Lichtenstein 7 June 2021
UK 23 March 2022, Child-art COVID memories
UK 23 March 2022, Child-art COVID memories
Qatar 25 September 2022
Nepal, 18 December 2022

14 comments

  1. Wow! Perfect stamp collection telling Covid-19 entire story ….congratulations!

  2. The blog beautifully depicts the journey during the Covid period through stamps. Extremely well written!!

  3. I thought that I knew everything there is to know about COVID but I am proved wrong. So many interesting tit bits of information are there in this write up which makes u want to know more about its history. Wonderful collection of stamps too.

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