Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Yugoslav Red Cross Stamps

The first Yugoslav Red Cross (JCK) stamp from 1933.
During the third week of September, 1933, the government of the former Yugoslavia issued a special stamp to be used on all correspondence and packages throughout the week. The stamp was a special week-long postal tax to collect money from the public for the Jugoslavija Crveni Križ, or the Yugoslav Red Cross. All the money used by the public to buy stamp booklets that week was donated to the JCK.

This first Red Cross stamp was the beginning of a stamp tradition that continued throughout much of Yugoslavia's existence and still continues today in modern-day Serbia!

After seeing the success of this innovative way of collecting funds for the JCK a decade earlier, the Yugoslav government-in-exile issued Red Cross stamps throughout the World War II years when Yugoslavia was under Nazi occupation. The Red Cross stamps would continue to be issued yearly on Solidarity Week throughout the decades of Socialist rule and were issued well into Yugoslavia's dying days in 2002-03. 

Throughout the decades they were issued in Yugoslavia, subjects of the Red Cross stamps varied. The first stamp from 1933 was a tax stamp with the Red Cross emblem on the face. Many issued during the Communist and Socialist years commemorated the Red Cross's fight against diseases such as tuberculosis and malaria. Others commemorated various other national health charities and organizations along with the Red Cross and featured their logos as well. And others simply featured the natural scenery of Yugoslavia along with the logo of the Red Cross.

Various Yugoslav Red Cross stamps from the 1950s-60s.
Many Yugoslav Red Cross stamps issued in the days prior to 1990 featured not only the standard Red Cross emblem, but those of the Red Crescent and The Red Lion and Sun as well.

One popular Red Cross stamp theme was the massive earthquake of 1963 that devastated the city of Skopje (capital of modern-day Macedonia). Stamps were issued well into the 1980s depicting the Skopje train station clock permanently stuck at 5:17 pm (the moment the quake struck) and the devastation around it. The Yugoslav authorities didn't want people to forget why it was so important to collect funds for the Red Cross every year.....

Today Solidarity Week is still held every year in Serbia and Red Cross stamps are still issued every year just as they have been for most of the past 80 years. Some of the newer stamps feature similar artwork and themes to those of the past, but newer designs featuring more modern images have been featured.

(Image credits for 1933 tax stamp: A. Sdobnikov/Wikimedia Commons.)

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