Saturday, June 27, 2009

Of stamps and Grace Kelly


Young girls and boys, who do not collect stamps, would never know the thrill of touching that foreign coarse paper with print spellling out strange country names and pictures that harken back to a wondorous world that lies beyond reach. The stamps are orange, purple, grey and green. But in these internet days of instant communication, stamps are archaic. They do not evoke that mysterious foreignness of exotic landscapes, electric trolleybuses, airplanes, faces of kings and queens and dictators. It's passe. The kings and queens and dictators are also gone.

And that brings me to the story of Grace Kelly.
When I was a young boy, my father encouraged me to collect stamps. There used to be a small stamp shop in Dhaka near the New Market that was run by a middle-aged balding man who wore glasses. The shop was on the second floor of a triangular shaped building and was appropriately called The Stamp Corner. I cannot imagine how a person who in traded stamps could survive in Dhaka then and even now.

The first time we went to the shop, the stamp seller opened a notebook where each page exhibited a set of stamps dediacted to a particular theme. The stamps were beautiful. That was when I saw the set from Monaco. A king and a queen adorned the stamps. The store-keeper said, "This is the Prince of Monaco...," and my father finished, "and this is Grace Kelly."

To this day, I remember the face of the stamp seller. He was in awe of my father's knowledge of this Hollywood star who gave up her film career to become a princess. She was famous in America, but nobody knew her in Dhaka.

I don't remember if we bought that stamp set on that day, but much later, almost thirty-five years later, in California, I came into that wonderful stamp set from Monaco again. By then my father had passed away.

Shortly afterwards I had an opportunity to visit Monaco. The tiny principality was nestled precipitously within the mountains that looked over the Mediterranean Sea. Grace Kelly had also died - in a terrible motor crash in the mountains. As I walked the pavement of Monaco and made a pilgrimage to Monte Carlo, I remembered how my father awed the Dhaka stamp seller almost forty years ago.

And today, on this Saturday summer evening, when I saw a rerun of Rear Window on TV, I saw Grace Kelly for the first time.

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