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Afghanistan 1964, the Shah forgets how he is supposed to lean

1960s Southwest Asian stamps paint a somewhat bizarre picture of life in those countries. Usually under UN auspices, rapid progress and westernization is shown. The children are all involved in scouting, the women are uncovered and being educated. What happens though when the disconected elite start to buy in. The long serving Shah of Afghanistan’s motto was leaner on Allah. The stamps indicate that he was really leaning on a much shakier UN. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

The image on this stamp beggars belief. Is the average citizen supposed to believe that such a doctor nurse team with microscopes was at his service should he fall ill? When the Shah was deposed 9 years later, he was under doctor’s care in Italy. When the Shah can’t find a decent doctor locally, it requires a degree of being out of touch to put out a stamp like this. They probably hoped the average citizen wasn’t mailing letters so would never come across such brown nose the UN stamps.

Todays stamp is issue A213, a 3 Afghan Rupee stamp issued by Afghanistan on March 8th, 1964. Though this farmed out issue was almost 6 months late, it celebrated United Nations Day 1963 with an 8 stamp and two souvenir sheet issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $1.20 whether unused or cancelled to order.

Mohammed Zahir became Shah at age 19 in 1933. His first few decades saw several of his uncles serve as Regent and Prime Minister. In the 1950s he started to take charge more personally and stopped leaning on his uncles. His official motto was “Leaner on Allah”. This seems a good motto for the King/Shah of a backward country implying both being chosen by God and also if things aren’t going well, blame not the King but God as it must be his will. Instead the Shah started relying on foreign aid much coming by way of the UN. One can imagine the tiny cadre of western educated Afghans dealing with the UN types. Can you imagine them to be Monarchists? I can’t.

The Shah listened to the offered advice. In 1964 there was a new constitution  with a bicameral legislature that was one third elected by the people. This resulted in a flood of new political parties of different stripes making demands.

In 1973, while in Rome for eye surgery there was a sudden end to the Monarchy. Not too surprising, the Shah only looks decent when compared to the very low bar of who came later. He was replaced though not by the modern lefties or the traditional religion folks but by his brother in law, a former Prime Minister. He was back as President, Prime Minster, and one political party General Secretary of the “Republic”. Sometimes you have to break the Monarchy to save it. Shah Mohammed Zahir was allowed to return to his Palace after the Taliban fell under the honorary title of “Father of the Country”, see https://the-philatelist.com/2018/10/03/afghanistan-1963-as-a-start-to-development-lets-begin-to-feed-ourselves-if-only-someone-could-build-us-an-irrigation-system/   . Finally he could stand straight.

The United Nations Day holiday celebrated on the stamp is October 24th, marking the day in 1944 that 50 nations met in San Francisco to sign the UN charter. In 1972, the holiday was repackaged as World Development Information Day to educate world opinion of all the UN was doing to address development disparities. Some times you have to break an institution to save it. I wonder if UN General Secretary Guterres has a brother in law?

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast  the Doctor and Nurse on todays stamp. Wonder who they were serving, aid workers and foreign embassy personnel until their immigration applications go through  to serve the British NHS. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.