Philatelic International


Philatelic International was an international philatelic society of collector-workers. It was founded and based in the Soviet Union in the 1920s to 1940s.

History

The creation of the Filintern was set up at a conference in Moscow in 22 to 30 June 1924. Its formation was greeted by all branches of the All-Russian Society of Philatelists and at the same time by the Soviet Esperantists. At the conference opening,, the Commissioner for Philately and Scripophily, declared:
A program for the Filintern's central organ was developed that included:
Filintern facilitates the goals of philatelists, scripophilists and Esperantists. Within Filintern, they could:
Using philately, scripophily and Esperanto, the Soviet authorities also hoped for promoting communist propaganda among the foreign proletariat. Filintern received a further boost from the SAT Congress of 1926.
The Philatelic International's organ was the journal Radio de Filintern. It was an insert included in the monthly magazine Soviet Philatelist or Soviet Collector. Its Editor was a prominent Russian philatelist L. K. Eichfuss. The first issue of the journal appeared in January 1925.
1928 Esperanto cover sent from Filintern in Moscow to Mr. in Basel