MADRID — Spain’s postal service is facing backlash this week after issuing a set of stamps highlighting different skin tones but making the lightest ones most valuable.
State-owned Correos España issued a set of four stamps in different skin-colored tones. The darker the stamp, the lower the price. The lightest color costs 1.60 euros ($1.95). The darkest one costs 0.70 euros ($0.85).
The postal service calls them “Equality Stamps” and introduced them on the anniversary of the murder of George Floyd. It said the stamps “reflect an unfair and painful reality that shouldn’t be allowed” and every letter or parcel sent with them would “send a message against racial inequality.”
The campaign was launched during European Diversity Month in collaboration with Spain’s national SOS Racism Federation, a nonprofit group, and featured a 60-second video with Spanish hip-hop star and activist El Chojín.
But while the goal of Correos España was to “shine a light on racial inequality and promote diversity, inclusion and equal rights,” critics are accusing the company of having a tin ear for racial issues and misreading the sentiment of Black people in Spain.
This photo released by Spain's postal service Correos on Friday May 28, 2021, shows a set of four stamps to signify different skin-colored tones. Spain’s postal service is feeling a backlash after issuing a set of four stamps in different skin-colored tones. The darker the stamp, the lower the price. (Photo: AP)
Antumi Toasijé, a historian who heads the government’s Council for the Elimination of Racial or Ethnic Discrimination, urged the postal service to stop selling the stamps.
“A campaign that outrages those it claims to defend is always a mistake,” he tweeted.
The main thrust of the public criticism was that the darker stamps have a lower value, giving the impression that a light skin color is worth more.
Moha Gerehou, a 28-year-old Spanish author and a former president of SOS Racismo Madrid, said that was “an insurmountable contradiction.”
“At the end of the day, an anti-racism campaign has put out a clearly racist message,” Gerehou told the Associated Press on Friday.
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He put the controversy in the context of what he sees as structural racism in Spain, which often goes unacknowledged but can be detected in such aspects as commercial advertising, the Spanish language and in access to housing. “It’s all connected,” he said.
Correos España said it would make no comment on the controversy.
The postal service’s initiative has divided Spanish anti-racism activists. While the national SOS Racism Federation backed it, the organization’s Madrid section poured scorn on the effort.
SOS Racismo Madrid said the campaign helps conceal the structural nature of racism and perpetuate the notion of Black inferiority.
Any racially aware person would have identified what was wrong with the campaign, it said, adding the blunder proved the need for more racially aware people in decision-making positions at companies.
The campaign also received criticism on social media.
This isn’t the first time the Spanish postal service has sought to make a statement on social issues. Last June, to coincide with LGBT Pride Month, it issued a special stamp and painted its delivery vans and mail boxes in rainbow colors.
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