On World Post Office Day, a look at how snail mails symbolise the humanity’s eternal need to forge connection
In May this year, a Twitter user  named bigolas dickolas wolfwood (@maskoffun)  tweeted  about a book called This Is How You Lose  The Time War (2019) by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone. Within days, the  tweet had raked up 1,40,000 likes. The book shot up the Amazon bestsellers  chart, peaking at an eye-watering #3. As much as the tweet is a testament of  the power of word-of-mouth, the book is a monument to the causes and effects of  communication, where two beings floating through time, going forwards and  backwards, forge a connection through messages left in mundane objects.
Both of these beings represent  warring factions. So much like the modern variant of text communication, where  we pour out our deepest ruminations and encode them in the syntax of digits,  sending it off to the recipient, who unboxes the gift of our choicest  meditations using their own criteria of comprehension. We are also warring,  yes, but we are on the same side. In a world increasingly prone to instant  polarisation, bridged by the absurd capacity of rapid digital communication, we  ought to take it slow. The post office shows us the way.
The vanishing joy of serendipity
Even as an adult, I find that the open face of postcards presents a terrifying prospect for privacy. An oafish thought. The image of postmen, vital middlemen, trusted to carry our messages to distant lands is stirring, and, to be sentimental, one of the great indices of the shared, contemporaneous nature of humanity. Imagine relinquishing a cherished utterance of romance, or a wince of sorrow, or a gasp of surprise to a total stranger. To be a postman is to be the channel through which a talky nation finds its stride.
To be a postman is to be the channel through which a talky nation finds its stride.
Crude forms of the postal system  date back to 2000 BC, with the oldest existing mail from around 240 BC in  Egypt. The postage system’s waning and waxing glory is also rooted in  economics. In India, the first inklings of a postal system were observed during  the fiscally astounding Mauryan empire, leading through various permutations to  an informal, localised postal system, which was finally brought under the  British Crown, aligned with further innovations such as unveiling the first  adhesive stamps in Asia, founding societies dedicated to philately, and instituting  a universal postage rate. The Indian government has always been at the  forefront of national communication and its willingness to shoulder affordable  conversation has made it the most consistent loss-making entity in Indian  history, beyond even the Indian Railways, whose tickets always bear a striking  reminder that it recovers only a fraction of its costs per ticket.
One may recall the Nora Ephron  movie, You’ve Got Mail (1998), released during the salad days of Amazon,  the online retailer, where a thoroughbred conventional bookstore (an “indie”,  as they are called these days) loses out to a commercial behemoth that saps the  joy out of serendipity and community. A similar fate has befallen national  postal systems all over the world.
India Post comes to terms with India
In his supremely regal historical  account, titled The Post Office of India  and Its Story (1920), Geoffrey  Clarke writes about a crucial realisation in colonial India: “The Indian  villager dreads the presence of the Government officer in his neighbourhood,  but he makes an exception in the case of Post Office employees. The postman is  always a welcome visitor...”.
He is at pains to capture the  diversity of the experience, which is coloured in the patchwork sky of colonial  India’s many peculiarities: the postman has to wade through laughable addresses  to “one with the limp leg”, and “one with the crooked back”, in a tight-knit  community where everyone knows everyone else. Difficult also is taking mail to  pilgrim and nomads, who are unmoored from the post’s requirement of fixity, and  people whose families live on boats “in the great rivers of Bengal and Burma”.
Clarke takes immense joy in the  difficulties of the postman, illiterate, having to carry mail from people, also  illiterate, through the conduit of professional letter-writers, and how they  developed an idiosyncratic code for understanding the English-language  addresses narrated by the English postal clerks. In many ways, the postal  system and its universal appeal was an impetus to the growth of nationalism in  India, as propaganda and nationalist literature, secret messages were often  covertly transmitted through these letters, unsuspected by the British  overlords who knew no better.
A domino effect
The village postman, who Clarke  dedicates an entire chapter to, often connects families across generations, but  is subject to the same strictures of caste and religion as any other Indian  citizen. Since people of the same community tend to live together, residents  from high and low castes congregate in segregated quarters of the city, and a  postman belonging to a lower caste background could not enter a high  caste-residence, lest he should be resisted with brute force. Human memory  today is evanescent, iridescent. Before we had yellowpages and phonebooks and digitised  caller IDs, we had the faculty of recollection, which held dear to us our great  elders, even if we hadn’t seen them in ages.
My mother, in her late 40s, tells me  she wrote postcards to my father in coy prenuptial dispatches, an inconceivable  process because that could not have been that further back in time, could it?  Digital communication exploded into being only in the second half of the 2000s,  when Facebook and Blackberry made text messaging ubiquitous, setting off a  domino effect that would culminate in things like WhatsApp, which was launched  in India only in 2012.
Today, it is used by around 600  million people in the subcontinent. It somehow doesn’t cohere with the same  reality that enabled me to pursue a pastime in philately around 10 years ago.  WhatsApp and other modes of communication have also precipitated a spate of  horrifying developments, where “WhatsApp forwards” is infamously the coterie of  false, enraging news for gullible people to broadcast. This has led to  witchhunts, and, as some scholars surmise, doldrums in our collective political  fortunes.
The postal system: A benevolent time  machine
The malaise braved by people who are  unable to participate in daily life, by reasons of mental or physical  conditions, have been exacerbated, as they are rendered unable to get on the  high-speed train of human communication. In her crisp novel, Long Live the Post Horn! (2012; English  tr. by Charlotte Barslund: 2020), the Norwegian author Vigdis Hjorth is at her  contemplative best. She documents the struggles of a depressed woman who cannot  relate to her sexual partner, is hardly able to feel herself, and is haunted by  the ghosts of her boss, who died by suicide. She is enlisted to devise a  campaign for the post office as an institution, which risks being destroyed  because of a European Union directive. She takes it on as a chore.
Gradually, in increasingly intimate conversation with compatriots, she realises the value the postal system holds in the lives of the common masses. Take, for instance, the case of addresses you’ve forgotten to people you love. In a land untouched by modern communication, perhaps, Hjorth imagines a small universe of kindred people, where you may send a life-altering letter on an incomplete address with a prayer issued to God and faith reposed in the postman, in his knowledge of his environs.
In a world increasingly prone to instant polarisation, bridged by the absurd capacity of rapid digital communication, we ought to take it slow. The post office shows us the way.
It is sheltered by his deep personal  knowledge of every living soul that basks in the rare sun around him, as he  lugs his postbag from door to closed door. This is impossible in the  impersonal, clinical spaces of online communication, where you are all but an  alphanumeric index in a mesh of cellular networks. The book is a marvellous  portrait of a person warming to the many spectacles of the human condition.
The postal system is dying everywhere
Geoffrey Clarke’s account was  written during the colonial occupation of India. For a modern-day account of a  humongous postal system and its trials and tribulations, the US Postal Service  has its history summarised and interspersed with stark images in Neither Snow Nor Rain: a History of the  United States Postal Service (2016) by Devin Leonard. From the contemporary  Moses of the 1940s, James Rademacher, who “led postal workers out of an  industrial dark age” and negotiated better salaries and stoppered arbitrary  work suspensions, to present day when post offices that were once as raucously  frequented as shopping malls (“You used to sell teacups and Tshirts,” a  distressed lady says to a post office that is about to be shuttered for budgetary  reasons. “That was awesome.”) are losing out to private players and Amazon, the  historical account is a proxy for a study in an increasingly throttled space of  communication. Patrons, locals, come to the post office to share their secrets  with the office manager, not buying stamps or sending off any saliva-sealed  communique.
Whether it be Anthony Comstock’s  unwarranted censorship of Walt Whitman’s poems and birth control pills in the  name of preventing indecency, or the Service’s small-hearted ambition in  sustaining itself well past the heyday of online communication, one cannot help  but reminisce at the meteoric role played by the postal system in “linking  minds” (Alexis Tocqueville), and shiver at the foreboding note of the book that  our cherished, red-blooded, republican system of communication which, as  Winifred Gallagher argues in her book How  the Post Office Created America, was the space of cerebral fusion, is dying  a slow death.
In 2018, India Post was again pegged  as the Indian Government’s biggest loss-making PSU. Similar to its American  counterpart, it is losing out to private players, bleeding dry as telegrams and  our beloved postcards, the charcuterie boards of essential arcana, decline in  popularity and utility. The most vibrant remnants of the peak of India Post are  its stamps, some of which are plastered gaily in an album back home, buried  below an album where I collected flowers and ears of wheat. Stamps are the  miniature windows into the beating heart of a country, peeking from the surface  of book mail or a grant of bank insurance or your first royalties, and  capturing in laminated paint the songs, the luminaries, and the many bounties  of an all-inclusive citizenry that it holds dear.
Here, a stamp of a Zaniskari horse; there, a hexagonal stamp featuring a tortoise; further away, a lithograph of RD Burman, closer here: a mother breastfeeding a suckling baby whose hands grab at empty postal air. That the post office is a chimaera, a combination of the mythos of democracy — due to the recurrent ethic of talking to fellow countrymen, stitching them closer like crochet — and the pathos of its slow death, forebodes much more than a dryer mailbox. It opens up our worlds to less fastidious means of communication, untouched by the credo of human intellect and burgeoning collective sympathy, and calluses our sense of togetherness. Until the next series of stamps about the latest crop of India’s space satellites: long live the post office.





