Diwali stamp released by US Postal Service
NEW YORK: A Diwali stamp was launched here by the US postal service, capping seven-year-long efforts by Indian-Americans and influential American lawmakers to commemorate the festival of lights.
The US Postal Service (USPS) commemorated the
Hindu festival of Diwali by dedicating the Diwali Forever
stamp.
The stamp was unveiled at the Indian Consulate
at an elaborate "first-day-of-issue" dedication ceremony yesterday.
The US Postal Service (USPS) commemorated the
Hindu festival of Diwali by dedicating the Diwali Forever stamp.
The stamp shows a photo of a traditional 'diya'
lit against a sparkling gold background and the words 'Forever USA 2016' written
below.
The ceremony was attended by Consul General
Ambassador Riva Ganguly Das, Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, Diwali Stamp Project
Chair Ranju Batra, USPS Vice President for Mail Entry and Payment Technology
Pritha Mehra, India's former Permanent Representative to the United Nations
Ambassador Hardeep Singh Puri and eminent Indian-American attorney Ravi
Batra.
"It has taken many years of hard work and
advocacy but light has finally triumphed. Today, Diwali has received its long
awaited commemorative stamp and rightfully joins the ranks of other major
religious and cultural holidays such as Christmas, Kwanzaa, Hanukkah and Eid,"
Maloney said.
Mehra said the postal service is "honoured" to
issue the Forever stamp that celebrates the Festival of Diwali.
"We hope these stamps will light up millions of
cards and letters as they make their journey through the mailstream," she
said.
Das said she was "honoured" to be part of
history as the USPS releases the Diwali Forever stamp.
"Now for the first time there is a stamp that
celebrates Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and Buddhists as Americans forever. The Diwali
stamp will be a matter of pride for generations to come," Ranju Batra
said.
Ravi Batra said since the start of the American
Revolution, "destiny has beckoned the US and India to be the closest allies" and
the Diwali stamp "represents nothing short of respectful inclusive
indivisibility within America and between two sovereigns."
Sally Andersen-Bruce of Connecticut
photographed the diya and Greg Breeding of Virginia designed the stamp, with
William Gicker of Washington serving as the project's art director.
Maloney said getting the Diwali stamp involved
years of hard work and advocacy, including thousands of petition signatures,
multiple meetings with Prime Minister Modi, personal appeals to President Barack
Obama, and multiple Congressional Resolutions.
She said the Diwali stamp would not have become
a reality without the "tireless efforts" of thousands of grassroots supporters
across the country who wrote letters and signed petitions.
"This stamp represents the triumph of knowledge
over ignorance, lightness over dark and good over evil. These values, these
virtues, are more important and relevant than ever before and I am thrilled that
after many years of fighting for this stamp it has finally become a reality,"
she said.
Source:-The Economic Times
No comments:
Post a Comment