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2001.11.16.
 
First
Day Cover:
4 stamps
Printing: lithography
Paper: Special paper with OBA free coating
Stamp Size: 48 x 31.9 mm
Perforation: 14 per 2cm
Designs: 17c Angel Gabrlet appears to Mary
34c The Manger localised and traditionalized
48c Arrival of the Shepherds
69c The Three wise man presenting their gifts
89c The escape of Mary, Joseph and Jesus from King Herod
$2.00 A grown up Jesus Christ in Fijian Style
Designer: Mr. George Bennett
Printers: Joh Enschede Security Printers
For many, Christmas means giving
and receiving gifts, a time of family celebration and reunions. It may
even bring to mind the characters from Dicken's memorable Christmas
Carol. Tiny Tim. Or Scrooge shouting out to a boy on the street 'What
day is it' and the boy's gleeful answer, "why, it's Christmas day…"
But the real story of Christmas, the celebration of Christianity's most
holy event and the commemoration of the birth of Jesus Christ, is told
in the Chapters of Luke and Matthew in the New Testament of the Holy
Bible.
It is a time rich in symbolism, when Christians the world-over
celebrate the dawn of God's light shining upon humans lost in a valley
of darkness. It is from this that the artist has created his images,
rendering them into a Fiji context, but faithfully following the story
of the birth of Jesus, a story that has remained unchanged for
centuries.
In the first of the Fiji Philatelic Bureau's six Christmas
commemorative stamps, the angel Gabriel appears to Mary, a virgin
espoused to Joseph, and the angel tells Mary that she shall bring forth
a son who will be named Jesus. He, exclaims the angel, will be known as
the Son of the Highest: and of His kingdom, there shall be no end. As
foretold by the angel, Mary gave birth to her first-born son, and He
was wrapped in swaddling clothes and laid in a manger because there was
no room for them in the inn.
It is a Fiji manger, surrounded by breadfruit and the lush Fiji jungle,
localized and traditionalized to be more meaningful to Fiji's
population. The child lies on a 'kula' fringed mat, much as a newborn
baby in the islands would do today. We are told that shepherds in the
area guarded their flocks at night, and the artist depicts the arrival
of the shepherds at the manger to see the newborn babe, after being
told "Fear not, for I bring you tidings of great joy. For unto you is
born a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord…"
The Fourth Stamp depicts the three wise men from the east, bearing
their gifts of gold (a Golden Cowrie shell, Cypraea aurantium, rare but
collected in Fiji); frankinsense and myrrh, both aromatic gifts which
would have been acceptable for a high king in ancient Fijian tradition.
The wise men carry chiefly staffs and a rolled bundle of masi, the
cloth made from beaten mulberry bark, still a common gift in this day
and age.
The Fifth Stamp illustrates Joseph, warned in a dream to flee before an
embittered Herod destroys the child, and the Holy Family preparing to
set sail on a voyaging canoe, a double-hulled drua.
The final stamp portrays what a Fiji Christ child might look like, his
world filled with birds and butterflies, the trees above thick with
mangoes, as, according to Biblical text, "the child grew…strong in
spirit and filled with wisdom, and the grace of God was upon him."
Each Fijian village has at least one Christian church, and in December,
particularly, the story of the birth of Christ unfolds in Fijian
sermons and carols. That the artist chose to make the scenery local
rather than attempt to depict Nazareth and Bethlehem is not an
injustice to the Bible, but rather an adaptation to the Fiji way of
understanding the principles behind the celebration.
"The narratives concerning Christ's infancy," notes one study of the
Bible, "as we find them in Matthew and Luke, pose difficult problems
for those who would use them to reconstruct actual history… they
communicate the mystery of redemption and do not portray a diary of
daily events."
What is historical is the decree ordering a census of the entire
world's population, and the trip made by Joseph and his virgin wife
Mary, from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to David's town of Bethlehem
- because he was of the house and lineage of David.
In the King James' version of the New Testament, a verse proclaims that
"Suddenly, there was a multitude of the heavenly host singing, Glory to
God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men"
That is Fiji's wish, not just for itself, but for the World.

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