ON THIS THIRD DAY OF FEBRUARY, 2026,
JAMES BALDWIN, HIS STAMP AND OUR TIME
Opening the drawer on the coffee table
where commemorative stamps are kept—ones
I can use, that I hold out for me—not
the ones in sleeves archived for grandchildren,
looking for the James Baldwin 37-cent
commemorative I attach to post card
poems as gifts for friends, this Baldwin
stamp came out on 23 July 2004,
before Forever stamps debuted
in April 2007 (eliminating the need
to purchase stamps in small denominations
to mail a letter), the first Forever
being Liberty Bell, I’m re-reading Baldwin
during Black History month. Listen to him
on Martin Luther King, Jr. “...to state
it baldly, ‘I liked him. It is rare that one
likes a world-famous man—by the time
they become famous they rarely like themselves.’”
This drawer of loose stamps is a treasure
chest of Black history: Ernest Gaines,
August Wilson, Edmonia Lewis, Harriet Tubman,
Tousssaint, Gwen Ifill, Ella—Waters and Fitzgerald--
Arturo Schomburg—Oh, man! Baldwin
wrote this in 1961, “King cannot
be considered chauvinist, what he says
to Negroes he will say to whites, and what he says
to whites he will say to Negroes.” Baldwin
is five years older than King. Until King,
in Montgomery, Baldwin writes, the minister
could not change the lives of hearers: “All
they came to find, and all that he could give
was sustenance for another day’s journey.”
Baldwin again, bluntly, “...the white manuscript
on whom the American Negro modeled himself,
is vanishing. This white man was, himself,
a mythical creation of men who have never been
what they imagined themselves to be.” We’re
not done here, are we? The Baldwin stamp
matches a portrait of him, circa-1960
against a backdrop view of Harlem
where he grew up. So much story
in a square-inch stamp. One more Baldwin
gem: “Europeans refer to Americans
as children in the same way American Negroes
refer to Americans as children...so little experience...
no key to the experience of others.” To
become oneself. These stamps help me
in my studies. To stamps in these times, saving
for grandchildren Grandpa’s stand: February, 2026.
This 37-cent postage stamp, added to an envelope
requiring 71 cents postage, pure and extra,
political, with hand-cancellation, through the mail.
Jim Bodeen
3 February 2026





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