Indian Five Rupee coins - IX
5 rupee international crop science congress
The
5 rupee coin of the international crop science congress. This
international conference was to be held in 1996 and a large quantity of
these commemorative coins were to be minted, but for some reason the
conference got canceled and never happened. So the mintage of these
coins was halted in between. As a result, only 11,000 such coins were
minted. This is definitely one of the rare coins of republic India.
Though after wards, the Calcutta mint released a two coin set having two
such coins. So these are now not as rare as they originally were,but
it is still rare enough to catch the fancy of numismatists. The design
on the obverse is the globe with crops all over it.And BTW, it does not look like it in the picture, but this coin I have put up has some shine and some very beautiful toning to it when we see it in light, and counts as UNC(UNC from original circulated issues of crop science and not taken from the set that was later released and is a restrike). The given condition is rare to find and has a premium pricing to it as well.
5 rupee, 60 years of commonwealth
The
5 rupee of the 60 years of commonwealth shows the Indian parliament
with the Indian flag on it. The design is almost identical to the one
rupee commemorative coin issued in 1991 on the commonwealth
parliamentary conference.
5 rupee: Perarignar anna durai
Conjeevaram
Natarajan Annadurai (15 September 1909 – 3 February 1969), popularly
called Anna (which means elder brother in Tamil), was a former Chief
Minister of the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu.He was the first member
of a Dravidian party to hold that post and was also the first
non-Congress leader to form a majority government in independent India.
He was also known by another title: Perarignar, which means great genius. He was an erudite scholar, an astute politician, a wise statesman , an acclaimed writer and a powerful orator. He had scripted and acted in several plays. Some of his plays were later made as movies. He was the first politician from the Dravidian parties to extensively use Tamil cinema for political propaganda. Born in a middle class family of weavers, he started his career as a school teacher and then moved into the political scene of the Madras Presidency as a journalist. He edited several political journals and enrolled as a member of the Dravidar Kazhagam. As an ardent follower of Periyar E. V. Ramasamy he rose in stature as a prominent member of the party.
Various protests against the then ruling Congress government took him to prison on several occasions. The last was during the Madras anti-Hindi agitation of 1965. The agitation itself helped Annadurai to gain popular support for his party. His party won a landslide victory in the 1967 state elections. His cabinet was the youngest at that time in India. He legalised Self-respect marriages, enforced a two language policy (over the three language formula in other southern states) for the state, implemented subsidising cost of rice and renamed the Madras State to Tamil Nadu.
However, he died of cancer just two years into office and his funeral was the most attended one at that time, holding a Guinness record. Several institutions and organisations are named after him. A splinter party launched by M. G. Ramachandran in 1972 years after the death of Annadurai was named after him as ADMK (Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam).
He was also known by another title: Perarignar, which means great genius. He was an erudite scholar, an astute politician, a wise statesman , an acclaimed writer and a powerful orator. He had scripted and acted in several plays. Some of his plays were later made as movies. He was the first politician from the Dravidian parties to extensively use Tamil cinema for political propaganda. Born in a middle class family of weavers, he started his career as a school teacher and then moved into the political scene of the Madras Presidency as a journalist. He edited several political journals and enrolled as a member of the Dravidar Kazhagam. As an ardent follower of Periyar E. V. Ramasamy he rose in stature as a prominent member of the party.
Various protests against the then ruling Congress government took him to prison on several occasions. The last was during the Madras anti-Hindi agitation of 1965. The agitation itself helped Annadurai to gain popular support for his party. His party won a landslide victory in the 1967 state elections. His cabinet was the youngest at that time in India. He legalised Self-respect marriages, enforced a two language policy (over the three language formula in other southern states) for the state, implemented subsidising cost of rice and renamed the Madras State to Tamil Nadu.
However, he died of cancer just two years into office and his funeral was the most attended one at that time, holding a Guinness record. Several institutions and organisations are named after him. A splinter party launched by M. G. Ramachandran in 1972 years after the death of Annadurai was named after him as ADMK (Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam).
Indian 5 rupee coins- VIII
5 rupee: Saint Alphonsa
Alphonsa
Mutthapadathu was born in 1910 in village Kudamaloor near Kottayam in
Kerala. She had a difficult childhood plagued by poverty and illness.
She fell into a pit of burning chaff and both here feet got deformed,
leaving her handicapped. In 1936, she was miraculously cured by saint
Therese of Lisieux. She taught at a school and there are a large number
of miracles associated with her, many of which involved curing children
having clubbed feet as she herself had been disabled by her feet for
many years. In 1939 she had an attack of double-pnuemonia which left her
weakened and she died in 1946 after a painful illness. In 1985, Pope
John Paul II formally approved a miracle that was attributed to her and
she received the title of Venerable Sister Alphonsa. One year later, she
was beatified. On the 50 years of her death, a stamp was released as
the first sign of national recognition to her. Pope Benedict XVI
authorized her canonization in 2007 and the process was completed after
an year, meaning that Alphonsa is now the first woman and only the
second saint from India after Saint Gonsalo Garcia.Apart from this 5 rupee coin, a stamp was also released to commemorate the canonization of Alphonsa. I have that stamp as well in my collection.
5 rupee: unity in diversity(cross coin)
This
one is definitely one of the rarest coins of recent times. There have
been many rare 5 rupee coins in the last couple of years and this one is
definitely on top of the wish list of most collectors, and many
beginners are not even aware of this one existing. Even I got to know of
this only 3-4 months back. The reason: this is a controversial coin
that was banned by the government of India following the controversy
surrounding coins of 1 rupee and 2 rupee coins with similar symbols on
them. As this was banned, it never came into circulation unlike the 2
rupee and the 1 rupee coins. The 1 rupee cross coin was also
controversial and was withdrawn from circulation , but at least it did
come into circulation. Even the dealers couldn't get hold of more than
1-2 packets of this one. And what they had was sold out in olympic
record time. So , now its not even available anywhere and its price has
already gone through the roof.
5 rupee: First war of independence(steel)
First war of independence copper nickel 5 rupee
First war of independence mule
This
5 rupee is a die variety/mule of the first war of independence normal
coin. The obverse is that of circulated coin but the reverse is from die
of copper-nickel coin. You may call it high relief variety. Also, note
the three bags(besides the cannon) in normal coin as against the four
bags in the shown mule coin.
Indian Five rupee coins - VII
5 rupee Lal Bahadur Shastri copper-nickel
Lal
Bahadur Shastri was born in 1905 in Prayag. His father Sharada Prasad,
a schoolteacher at the local school, passed away when Lal Bahadur was
barely a year and a half. Growing up without a father forced Lal
Bahadur to accept responsibility at an early age. He was sent by his
uncle to Varanasi to pursue his studies.After a short stay with a family that treated him unkindly, Lal Bahadur stayed with a teacher, Mishraji. Mishraji often sat and told stories about how India lost her freedom to the British to young Lal Bahadur. These conversations later inspired Lal Bahadur to join the struggle for Indian freedom.
At
about this time Gandhiji came to Varanasi and spoke of his
non-cooperation movement. Lal Bahadur took a keen interest in the
growing movement and when the time came to boycott the schools, he did
so by not appearing for his examinations. With just one year left for
his graduation, the news was not taken well at home. Neither his Uncle
nor Mishraji supported Lal Bahadur’s action, but his mother who had
complete faith in him, supported his decision as long as he promised
not to renege from the task later. With his mother’s blessings, he
became fully involved in the non-cooperation movement. He was arrested
for taking part in banned processions but released since it was his
first offense. This was to be the first of many arrests for Lal
Bahadur. He worked during the evenings in a khadi shop and studied
while studying for the degree of Shastri (Bachelor) in Philosophy. Lal
Bahadur graduated at the head of his class.
His
total commitment to Gandhiji and the non-cooperation movement resulted
in many jail terms. Since the Congress party was banned by the British
Government, Lal Bahadur and his associates spent their time travelling
around India spreading Gandhiji’s message. He was soon arrested for
these activities, and jailed for seven months at an unknown location.
Eighteen months later Lalita Devi was granted permission to meet her
husband.
Lal Bahadur was finally released from prison in 1946. On August 15, 1947 India gained independence. Lal Bahadur was appointed Minister of Police in Nehru’s cabinet. In 1951 Jawaharlal Nehru was re-elected Prime Minister for a second term, and Lal Bahadur was appointed General Secretary of the Lok Sabha. While in Nehru’s cabinet, Lal Bahadur was entrusted with portfolios for Minister of Railways, Minister of Communications and later Home Minister. He served as Nehru’s right hand. On May 27, 1964 Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru died. May of that year Lal Bahadur Shastri became India’s second Prime Minister. His term is best known for introducing measures to make India self-sufficient in food production.
In 1965 Pakistan attacked India on the Kashmiri front and Lal Bahadur Shastri responded in kind by punching toward Lahore. In 1966 a cease-fire was issued as a result of international pressure. Lal Bahadur Shastri went to Tashkent to hold talks with Ayub Khan and an agreement was soon signed.
Lal Bahadur passed away in Tashkent before returning home. He was posthumously conferred with the Bharat Ratna Award.
Lal Bahadur was finally released from prison in 1946. On August 15, 1947 India gained independence. Lal Bahadur was appointed Minister of Police in Nehru’s cabinet. In 1951 Jawaharlal Nehru was re-elected Prime Minister for a second term, and Lal Bahadur was appointed General Secretary of the Lok Sabha. While in Nehru’s cabinet, Lal Bahadur was entrusted with portfolios for Minister of Railways, Minister of Communications and later Home Minister. He served as Nehru’s right hand. On May 27, 1964 Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru died. May of that year Lal Bahadur Shastri became India’s second Prime Minister. His term is best known for introducing measures to make India self-sufficient in food production.
In 1965 Pakistan attacked India on the Kashmiri front and Lal Bahadur Shastri responded in kind by punching toward Lahore. In 1966 a cease-fire was issued as a result of international pressure. Lal Bahadur Shastri went to Tashkent to hold talks with Ayub Khan and an agreement was soon signed.
Lal Bahadur passed away in Tashkent before returning home. He was posthumously conferred with the Bharat Ratna Award.
5 Rupee, saint Thiruvalluvar
St.
Thiruvalluvar, the author of THIRUKKURAL was born about 30 years before
Jesus Christ in Mylapore, the village of peacocks (Myl in Tamil means
peacock), the present day Chennai, at a time when the Tamil Land was
rich in culture, vivid in its life and adventurous in its commerce.
Valluvars were the priests of outcaste people at that time. Tamilians
take cognizance of the birth of Thiruvalluvar as a basis of Tamil
calendar according to which we are now in the year 2032 of Thiruvalluvar
Aandu (Year). Thirukkural is regarded as a renowned work, eulogized as a
directory of code of conduct and ethics to humanity. The revered poet
not only deals with the general administration, but also codified
clear-cut directions to the mankind on how they should behave and act in
a social, political, religious and family circles.
Thiruvalluvar
used to keep by his side, when he sat for meals, a needle and a small
cup filled with water. Once, his host asked him as to why he insisted on
having these two placed by the side of the plate. He said, "Food should
not be wasted, even a grain is precious. Sometimes, stray grains of
cooked rice or stray pieces of cooked vegetables fall off the plate or
away from it. While I eat, I lift them off the floor, with the help of
this needle and stir them in the water to clean them and eat them." What
a great lesson this is for those who waste more, than they consume in
today’s consumerist society!
As
Emmons White has said, Thiruvalluvar was a kindly, liberal-minded man
and his poetry is a kind of synthesis of the best moral teachings of his
age. In the words of Dr. John Lazarus who has made an English
translation of the Kural, “It is refreshing to think of a nation which
produced so great a man and so unique a work. The morality he preached
could not have grown except on an essentially moral soil.” This
classical work in Tamil has been widely translated in over 60 languages
of the world. Nearly 300 years ago, the Italian Jesuit missionary,
Constantius Beschi (known as Veeramamunnivar in Tamil) who came to Tamil
Nadu in 1710, translated the Thirukkural into Latin. Rev. G U Pope who
hailed Thiruvalluvar as “the Bard of Universal Man” translated the Kural
and printed the it first in English. Many European missionaries have
made translations into English between 1820 and 1886. Freedom fighters
and statesmen, C Rajagopalachari and VVS Iyer have also translated the
Kural into English. Barring perhaps the Bible and the Koran, the Kural
is the most translated work.
Erudite
Tamil Poets as well as the kings of the three Tamil Kingdoms – Chera,
Chola and Pandya – acknowledged the literary greatness of Thirukkural.
It is said that at the time of its first presentation to the king’s
court, the Pandyan king wanted its greatness to be known to his whole
kingdom. He put it to test by placing the manuscript along with those of
other contemporary works in a golden lotus plank and allowed it to
float in the tank at the Madurai Meenakshi temple. The sanctified plank
that would recognize only the masterpieces is said to have rejected all
other works and retained only the Thirukkural.
People
in Tamil Nadu worship Thiruvalluvar as a guru. They have erected a
beautiful shrine to him and to his wife in the midst of a garden in
Mylapore. It lies not far from the waves of the sea that are often
referred to in his verses. Every year in the month of April, people
celebrate a grand festival at the shrine. Another important memorial to
the immortal saint is Valluvar Kottam in Chennai, which is shaped like a
temple chariot. A life size statue of Thiruvalluvar has been installed
in the tall chariot. The 133 chapters of his work have been depicted in
bas-relief in the front hall corridors of the chariot. The auditorium at
Valluvarkottam is said to be the largest in Asia with accommodation
capacity for 4000 people. Recently, Tamil Nadu government has erected a
magnificent 133-foot height statue of the saint denoting the 133
chapters in Thirukkural for tourists in the midst of sea in Kaniyakumari
(Cape Comerin) at the confluence of the three seas.
While
being sworn in as the president of India, Dr. Abdul Kalam said that a
country needs to have the characteristics as enshrined in Thirukkural
and quoted from the Kural: “ Pini inmai Selvam Vilaivinbam Emam,
aniyenba Nattirku vainthu”. That is “The important elements that
constitute a nation are: being disease free; wealth; high productivity;
harmonious living and strong defence.” It makes deep sense in this
fast-moving world. If only there is more forbearance and patience,
mutual respect and understanding, the world would become a better place
for all of us to live.
5 rupee: FAO
The Food and Agriculture Organization of
the United Nations (FAO) is a specialised agency of the United Nations
that leads international efforts to defeat hunger. Serving both
developed and developing countries, FAO acts as a neutral forum where
all nations meet as equals to negotiate agreements and debate policy.
FAO is also a source of knowledge and information, and helps developing
countries and countries in transition modernise and improve agriculture,
forestry and fisheries practices, ensuring good nutrition and food
security for all. Its Latin motto, fiat panis, translates into
English as "let there be bread". As of 8 August 2008, FAO has 191
members states along with the European Community and the Faroe Islands,
which are associate members.
Indian Five rupee coins -VI
5 rupee, Dadabhai Naoroji
Dadabhai
Naoroji helped lay the foundation of India's contemporary freedom
struggle. At a time when the East India Company had systematically
dismantled the nationalistic co- operation between the princely states
of India, rose to prominence Dadabhai Naoroji, a peerless patriot who
defined the modern Indian freedom struggle.Dadabhai was born on September 4th, 1825 to a poor Parsi family in Bombay. His father, Naoroji Palanji Dordi, died when Dadabhai was only 4 years old. Dadabhai was brought up by his illiterate mother Maneckbai who gave Dadabhai the best English education possible. As a student, Dadabhai had a knack for mental mathematics and went on to distinguish himself in Mathematics and English at the Elphinstone Institution (now College) in Bombay. So impressed were his peers that one professor called him the "promise of India." Another offered to pay half the expenses for Dadabhai to study abroad. His Parsi elders refused to pay the other half of the expenses out of fear that Dadabhai would convert to Christianity and marry an Englishwoman.
On completion of his education, Dadabhai was appointed the Head Native Assistant Master at the Elphinstone Institution and went on to become the first Indian Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. Dadabhai entered the political fray in 1852. The East India Company acquired a 20 year lease to "manage" India from the British Government in 1833. The Company applied for renewal of the lease in 1853. Dadabhai strongly opposed the renewal of the lease and organized large meetings and sent petitions to the British Government in England to deny the Company a renewal. Even though the British Government did renew the Company's lease, his petitions dispelled a lot ignorance regarding India.
Dadabhai felt that the British misrule of India was because of ignorance of the way of life and needs on the Indian people. To remedy this he felt that he must educate the Indian masses of their rights and he workeed towards this end.
Dadabhai wanted to win friends and sympathizers for India. He joined several learned societies, delivered many speeches and wrote articles on the plight of India. He founded the East Indian Association on December 1st, 1866. The association was comprised of high ranking officers from India and people who had access to Members of the British Parliament. Dadabhai had become the unofficial ambassador of India.
Dadabhai was elected to the British Parliament in 1892 from Central Finsbury as the Liberal party candidate. This made it possible for Dadabhai to work for India from within! He got a resolution passed for holding preliminary examinations for the I.C.S. in India and England simultaneously and also got the Wiley Commission, the royal commission on India expenditure, to acknowledge the need for even distribution of administrative and military expenditure between India and England.
Dadabhai's efforts were rewarded in 1866 when the Secretary of State for India agreed to appoint 9 Indians out of 60 to the Indian Civil Service (I.C.S.) by nomination.
As the years passed, Dadabhai grew more and more disillusioned with the "fair-minded" British. After spending years collecting statistics, Dadabhai propounded the drain theory: "The inevitable consequence of foreign domination is the drain of wealth of the subject nation to the country of the rulers." Dadabhai proved that the average annual income of an Indian was barely Rs. 20. Examining the import and export figures for 37 years, he proved that India's exports exceeded its imports by Rs. 50 crores (approximately $135 million) annually.
Dadabhai was key to the establishment of the Indian National Congress (I.N.C.) founded by A.O. Hume. More importantly he averted a split in the Congress between the extremists like B.G. Tilak, B.C. Pal, and A. Ghosh and the moderates.
The "Grand Old Man of India," as Dadabhai was fondly known, can be viewed as the architect that laid the foundation of the Indian freedom struggle. He sacrificed his career and his family for India. He resigned his professorship to go to England to increase awareness of India in Britain. His only son and his mother died while he was in England. Dadabhai's methods for justice for India were always non-violent and constitutional.
Dadabhai died at the age of 92 on June 30th, 1917. 2 months later, the Minto Morley reforms were passed in the British Parliament granting much of what Dadabhai had been fighting for.
5 rupee Jagath Guru Narayan copper nickel
5 rupee Jagath Guru Narayan steel
Born in august 1856, the great sage Sree Narayana is the most revolutionary social reformer Kerala has produced.
The caste system was very much prevalant iin the society at that time, and both places of worship and institutes of learning were shut down for the 'avarnas', or the non-caste Hindus. The outcastes had to suffer various disabilities and humiliations like untouchability and unapproachibility.
Born to ‘Madan Asan’ and ‘Kutty Amma’, who endearingly called him ‘Nanu’,he had an ascetic bent of mind even from his childhood. When he was on the threshold of his youth, he had to undergo the ceremonial of a marriage due to parental pressure. But he never led a married life. At the age of twenty-three he left his family, renounced the pleasures of his world and wandered about as an “avadhutha” or mendicant, keeping his body and soul together by the alms he received from all sorts of people.
In those days, the foundation and consecration of a Hindu temple was the exclusive monopoly of the Brahmins. Sree Narayana’s first revolutionary act was the challenge thrown against this monopoly, by him consecrating temples. The first in this line was the temple dedicated to Shiva in Aruvippuram in 1888 A.D. In the temple is inscribed in Malayalam the following ideal, which epitomizes the Sree Narayana creed. “This is the ideal place Where all live in full harmony Without distinction of Caste or prejudice of Creed”. Within a few years Sree Narayana established a multitude of temples all over Kerala.
Long before the Temple Entry Proclamation of the Travancore government in 1936 whereby government temples were thro wn open to all Hindus, the temples established by Sree Narayana had become the asylum for worship, of the ‘lowlier of the lowliest’. Sree Narayana’s temples made no discrimination on the ground of caste, or creed. Unlike caste Hindu temples, they were open to both Hindus and non-Hindus.
He conducted a veritable campaign to eradicate the material disabilities of the downtrodden sections of Hindus. In 1903, Dr. P. Palpu, a devotee of Sree Narayana, founded a social organization called S.N.D.P Yogam (Sree Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam), the organization to promote the Dharma of Sree Narayana. This organization has done invaluable service in the epic struggle against caste system in Kerala. The organizers of S.N.D.P made Sree Narayana as its first President. The first General Secretary of S.N.D.P Yogam was Kumaran Asan, the peerless pioneer among modern Malayalam poets. Early in 1921 an All Kerala Fraternity Conference was held at Alwaye, and in this conference was delivered his eternal message “One Caste, One Religion, One God for Mankind”.
Sree Narayana is one of those rare men whose greatness was recognized even while they were alive. No better testimony is needed for this than the fact that Rabindranath Tagore and Mahatma Gandhi had visited and paid respects to him. Tagore, when he visited Kerala in 1922, interviewed the Guru and was deeply impressed that he remarked- “Among the ‘Paramahamsas’ alive in India now, there is none Who has lived such a life of purity as Swami Sree Narayana”.
When Mahatma Gandhi visited Sree Narayana in 1923, there was a heart-to-heart exchange of ideas between them and in their dialogue Sree Narayana made no secret of his strong feelings, about the need to eradicate the caste system root and branch.
The last great conference, which was convened at the behest of Sree Narayana, was the “All Religious Conference”, the Parliament of religions held at Alwaye in 1924. In this conference where eminent representatives of all great religions assembled, Sree Narayana proclaimed that the conference was convened “Not to argue and win but to know and to make known”. In a message which he delivered at the conference, he said ‘This great Parliament of religions makes it abundantly clear that the ultimate goal of all religions is same and so there is no need for followers of different religions to indulge in mutual conflict.”
The great Guru Sree Narayana attained Samadhi on September 20, 1928. Thus physically Guru disappeared, but spiritually he lives forever in the minds of mankind.
The caste system was very much prevalant iin the society at that time, and both places of worship and institutes of learning were shut down for the 'avarnas', or the non-caste Hindus. The outcastes had to suffer various disabilities and humiliations like untouchability and unapproachibility.
Born to ‘Madan Asan’ and ‘Kutty Amma’, who endearingly called him ‘Nanu’,he had an ascetic bent of mind even from his childhood. When he was on the threshold of his youth, he had to undergo the ceremonial of a marriage due to parental pressure. But he never led a married life. At the age of twenty-three he left his family, renounced the pleasures of his world and wandered about as an “avadhutha” or mendicant, keeping his body and soul together by the alms he received from all sorts of people.
In those days, the foundation and consecration of a Hindu temple was the exclusive monopoly of the Brahmins. Sree Narayana’s first revolutionary act was the challenge thrown against this monopoly, by him consecrating temples. The first in this line was the temple dedicated to Shiva in Aruvippuram in 1888 A.D. In the temple is inscribed in Malayalam the following ideal, which epitomizes the Sree Narayana creed. “This is the ideal place Where all live in full harmony Without distinction of Caste or prejudice of Creed”. Within a few years Sree Narayana established a multitude of temples all over Kerala.
Long before the Temple Entry Proclamation of the Travancore government in 1936 whereby government temples were thro wn open to all Hindus, the temples established by Sree Narayana had become the asylum for worship, of the ‘lowlier of the lowliest’. Sree Narayana’s temples made no discrimination on the ground of caste, or creed. Unlike caste Hindu temples, they were open to both Hindus and non-Hindus.
He conducted a veritable campaign to eradicate the material disabilities of the downtrodden sections of Hindus. In 1903, Dr. P. Palpu, a devotee of Sree Narayana, founded a social organization called S.N.D.P Yogam (Sree Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam), the organization to promote the Dharma of Sree Narayana. This organization has done invaluable service in the epic struggle against caste system in Kerala. The organizers of S.N.D.P made Sree Narayana as its first President. The first General Secretary of S.N.D.P Yogam was Kumaran Asan, the peerless pioneer among modern Malayalam poets. Early in 1921 an All Kerala Fraternity Conference was held at Alwaye, and in this conference was delivered his eternal message “One Caste, One Religion, One God for Mankind”.
Sree Narayana is one of those rare men whose greatness was recognized even while they were alive. No better testimony is needed for this than the fact that Rabindranath Tagore and Mahatma Gandhi had visited and paid respects to him. Tagore, when he visited Kerala in 1922, interviewed the Guru and was deeply impressed that he remarked- “Among the ‘Paramahamsas’ alive in India now, there is none Who has lived such a life of purity as Swami Sree Narayana”.
When Mahatma Gandhi visited Sree Narayana in 1923, there was a heart-to-heart exchange of ideas between them and in their dialogue Sree Narayana made no secret of his strong feelings, about the need to eradicate the caste system root and branch.
The last great conference, which was convened at the behest of Sree Narayana, was the “All Religious Conference”, the Parliament of religions held at Alwaye in 1924. In this conference where eminent representatives of all great religions assembled, Sree Narayana proclaimed that the conference was convened “Not to argue and win but to know and to make known”. In a message which he delivered at the conference, he said ‘This great Parliament of religions makes it abundantly clear that the ultimate goal of all religions is same and so there is no need for followers of different religions to indulge in mutual conflict.”
The great Guru Sree Narayana attained Samadhi on September 20, 1928. Thus physically Guru disappeared, but spiritually he lives forever in the minds of mankind.
5 rupee Mother's health is child's health
With
growing focus on health, the government made many different campaigns,
especially to reduce the Infant mortality rate. Realizing that a
pregnant mother's health and diet would have direct impact on the
child's health, this coin was released as a part of a campaign to raise
awareness on this particular health issue in pregnant mothers.
Indian Five rupee coins -
5 rupee,2010
5 rupee: Mahatma Basaveshwara(copper-nickel)
5 rupee Bal Gangadhar Tilak copper nickel
5 rupee: Tilakji
The coin shown above is a rare coin of the 21st century. As it so
happens, when this coin was released "Bal Gangadhar Tilakji" was written
on the top, where ji is an honorific. Someone spotted this
error(though technically this is not an error) and reported this to the
mint authorities.The issue was majorly political in the sense that if
"Gandhiji" was not written on the coins then why ji should be appended
with Bal Gangadhar Tilak. Subsequently the production of these coins
which were being released on the occasion of 150 years of birth of
Lokmanya Tilak was stopped and the stock was melted. For further issues,
the ji was removed. Subsequent production has "Bal Gangadhar Tilak" written on the coins, and the Tilakji coin is now known officially as an error coin.
Although, I would like to add that in my opinion(and technically also) this one is a die variety and not an error coin.
Although, I would like to add that in my opinion(and technically also) this one is a die variety and not an error coin.
5 rupee: Lokmanya Tilak(steel)
This
one is rarer than the Tilak coin in copper-nickel. Both come under the
category of very rare coins. The copper nickel coin is relatively common
though.
Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak (29th Couplet) Described by British as "The Father of Indian Unrest " Tilak was born on 23.07.1856. His slogan, "Swaraj (Self Rule) is my birthright", inspired millions of Indians. His book "Geetarahasya"a classic treatise on Geeta in Marathi was written by him, in prison at Mandalay.Great journalist- editor, an authority on Vedas, Sanskrit Scholar, mathematician and a natural leader of India. Died 01.08.1920 "Swaraj is our birthright," thundered Tilak, the Lion of India. He founded schools and published newspapers, all for his motherland. He rotted in a distant jail at Mandalay, in Burma. he wore himself out till his last breath, to awaken his countrymen.
Tilak was born in Ratnagiri on 23rd July 1856. He lived for 64 years. Every year of his life was a milestone of achievements.
How much the British feared Tilak, can be gauged from the letter the Governor of Bombay wrote in 1908 to the Secre tary of State for India in England:
'He is one of the chief conspirators opposed to the British rule in India. He may even be the Chief con spirator. He has planned the Ganesha Festival, the Shivaji Festival, the Paisa Fund and the National Schools, with the sole aim of destroying British rule in India.'
When Tilak passed away, Mahatma Gandhi said: "He used his steel-like will power for the country. His life is an open book. The Lokmanya is the Architect of New India. Future generations will remember Tilak with reverence, as the man who lived and died for their sake."
5 Rupee: Mahatma Basaveshwara(steel)
Basava [also known as Basavanna] flourished in the 12th century in
Karnataka. He was a Prime Minister to king Bijjala who ruled from 1157
to 1167 over Kalyana, a city of historic importance. Basava was indeed a
great prophet for in him we find the combination of rare qualities. He
was a mystic by temperament, an idealist by choice, a statesman by
profession, a man of letters by taste, a humanist by sympathy and a
social reformer by conviction.
Basava strove hard to bring about reformation in Hinduism into which social evils had crept in. The social and cultural conflicts which had been going on in India from ancient days were stimulating a new foment within the Hindu society. At the time of Basava there were apologists who had been giving a new interpretation to the irrational religious practices and form of thought. But Basava with a courageous frankness acknowledged the prevailing evils of the Hindu society and suggested ways and means to create a new orientation.
5 Rupee: 2009
This
is the newest coin of 5rupee minted by the government of India. Various
reasons can be cited for stopping the mintage of the steel coins. It
felt pretty much like a 50 paisa coin and some pople even faked it. The
new coin is made of Copper-nickel and is quite sleek, and slighly
smaller than the 5 rupee coin in nickel having the same design. Here in
Delhi people are either hoarding it or selling it in black, so its not
in circulation yet, as i publish this post.
Indian Five rupee coins - IV
5 rupee: Bhagwan Mahavir janm kalyanak
This coin was released on the occasion of the 2600th Mahavir Jayanti, or the 2600th birth anniversary of Lord Mahavira, who is revered by the Jain community.Shramana Bhagwan Mahavir was the last Tirthankar in the Avasarpini phase or the phase of decline. He was a contemporary of Gautam Buddha, Lao-Tse, Confucius, Socrates, etc. Bhagwan Mahavir was born on Monday the 13th day of the Shukla -the bright fortnight of Chaitra according to the Indian Calendar that is on the 30th of March 599 B. C. at Kshatriyakunda (in Bihar). He was born as Vardhman Kumar to King Siddhartha and Queen Trishala. When he was 30 years of age, he renounced his worldly life and assumed the life of Sädhanä or spiritual endeavour on Mondav the 10th day of Krishna Paksha the black fortnight of Kartik according to the Indian Calendar that is on 19th December 569 B.C. He performed a severe and austere penance for twelve and a half years and then on Sunday, the 10th day of Shukla of Vaishäkh that is 13th April 558 B.C., he attained Kevaljnan or absolute enlightenment. He preached his first message on the 11th day of Shukla Paksha of Vaishakh and showed the multidimensional path for the attainment of selfpurification and selfperfection. The same path shown by him is followed today. On Tuesday, the new Moon day in Kartik, i.e , on the 15th October 528 B.C. Lord Mahavir attained salvation, Moksha and his life ended with his attainment of absolute deliverance.
When the celebrations for the 2600th Mahavir Jayanti ended, the then Prime Minister Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee released commemorative set of Bhagwan Mahavira having coins in the denomination of Rs 5 and Rs 100.
5 rupee: ILO
The International Labour Organization (ILO)
is devoted to advancing opportunities for women and men to obtain
decent and productive work in conditions of freedom, equity, security
and human dignity. Its main aims are to promote rights at work,
encourage decent employment opportunities, enhance social protection and
strengthen dialogue in handling work-related issues.In promoting social justice and internationally recognized human and labour rights, the organization continues to pursue its founding mission that labour peace is essential to prosperity. Today, the ILO helps advance the creation of decent jobs and the kinds of economic and working conditions that give working people and business people a stake in lasting peace, prosperity and progress.
Origins and history
The ILO was founded in 1919, in the wake of a destructive war, to pursue a vision based on the premise that universal, lasting peace can be established only if it is based upon decent treatment of working people. The ILO became the first specialized agency of the UN in 1946.
ILO's vision of decent work
Work is central to people's well-being. In addition to providing income, work can pave the way for broader social and economic advancement, strengthening individuals, their families and communities. Such progress, however, hinges on work that is decent. Decent work sums up the aspirations of people in their working lives.
Tripartism and social dialogue
The ILO is the only 'tripartite' United Nations agency in that it brings together representatives of governments, employers and workers to jointly shape policies and programmes. This unique arrangement gives the ILO an edge in incorporating 'real world' knowledge about employment and work.
International labour standards
The ILO is the global body responsible for drawing up and overseeing international labour standards. Working with its Member States, the ILO seeks to ensure that labour standards are respected in practice as well as principle.
Working out of Poverty
Poverty remains deep and widespread across the developing world and some transition countries, with an estimated 2 billion people in the world today live on the equivalent of less than USD 2 per day. In the view of the ILO, the main route out of poverty is work.
5 rupee, 2002Diameter: 23mm
Lion pedestal on reverse
Lion pedestal on reverse
Five rupee: SBI(steel)
State Bank of India (SBI) is the largest bank in India.
The
bank traces its ancestry back through the Imperial Bank of India to the
founding in 1806 of the Bank of Calcutta, making it the oldest
commercial bank in the Indian Subcontinent. The Government of India
nationalised the Imperial Bank of India in 1955, with the Reserve Bank
of India taking a 60% stake, and renamed it the State Bank of India. In
2008, the Government took over the stake held by the Reserve Bank of
India.
SBI
provides a range of banking products through its vast network in India
and overseas, including products aimed at NRIs. The State Bank Group,
with over 16000 branches, has the largest branch network in India. With
an asset base of $250 billion and $195 billion in deposits, it is a
regional banking behemoth. It has a market share among Indian commercial
banks of about 20% in deposits and advances, and SBI accounts for
almost one-fifth of the nation’s loans.
SBI
has tried to reduce its over-staffing through computerizing operations
and Golden handshake schemes that led to a flight of its best and
brightest managers. These managers took the retirement allowances and
then went on the become senior managers at new private sector banks.
Five rupee: ONGC(steel)
Oil
and Natural Gas Corporation Limited ( ONGC India) is considered Asia's
best Oil & Gas company . It ranks as the 2nd biggest E&P company
(and 1st in terms of profits), as per the Platts Energy Business
Technology (EBT) Survey 2004. It ranks 24th among Global Energy
Companies by Market Capitalization in PFC Energy 50 (December 2004).
ONGC was ranked 17th till March 2004, before the shares prices dropped
marginally for external reasons.
Activities
Everyone
who works at ONGC India is responsible for protecting the environment,
health and safety of our people and communities worldwide. Our
commitment to SHE performance is an integral part of our business, and
achieving cost-effective solution is essential to our long-term success.
The
dedication to the causes of environment and safety in ONGC is amply
demonstrated by the fact that a separate institute named Institute of
Petroleum Safety, Health and Environment Management (IPSHEM) had been
set up way back in 1989 to deal with these issues.
Oil
and Natural Gas Corporation Limited ONGC 's safety policy seeks to
provide safe and healthy working conditions and enlist the active
support of all staff in achieving these ends.
The
development activities of ONGC has been planned on sound ecological
principle and incorporates appropriate environmental safeguards.
Five rupee: Lal Bahadur shastri(steel)
Lal
Bahadur Shastri was born in 1905 in Prayag. His father Sharada Prasad, a
schoolteacher at the local school, passed away when Lal Bahadur was
barely a year and a half. Growing up without a father forced Lal Bahadur
to accept responsibility at an early age. He was sent by his uncle to
Varanasi to pursue his studies.
After
a short stay with a family that treated him unkindly, Lal Bahadur
stayed with a teacher, Mishraji. Mishraji often sat and told stories
about how India lost her freedom to the British to young Lal Bahadur.
These conversations later inspired Lal Bahadur to join the struggle for
Indian freedom
At
about this time Gandhiji came to Varanasi and spoke of his
non-cooperation movement. Lal Bahadur took a keen interest in the
growing movement and when the time came to boycott the schools, he did
so by not appearing for his examinations. With just one year left for
his graduation, the news was not taken well at home. Neither his Uncle
nor Mishraji supported Lal Bahadur’s action, but his mother who had
complete faith in him, supported his decision as long as he promised not
to renege from the task later. With his mother’s blessings, he became
fully involved in the non-cooperation movement. He was arrested for
taking part in banned processions but released since it was his first
offense. This was to be the first of many arrests for Lal Bahadur. He
worked during the evenings in a khadi shop and studied while studying
for the degree of Shastri (Bachelor) in Philosophy. Lal Bahadur
graduated at the head of his class.
His
total commitment to Gandhiji and the non-cooperation movement resulted
in many jail terms. Since the Congress party was banned by the British
Government, Lal Bahadur and his associates spent their time travelling
around India spreading Gandhiji’s message. He was soon arrested for
these activities, and jailed for seven months at an unknown location.
Eighteen months later Lalita Devi was granted permission to meet her
husband
Lal
Bahadur was finally released from prison in 1946. On August 15, 1947
India gained independence. Lal Bahadur was appointed Minister of Police
in Nehru’s cabinet. In 1951 Jawaharlal Nehru was re-elected Prime
Minister for a second term, and Lal Bahadur was appointed General
Secretary of the Lok Sabha. While in Nehru’s cabinet, Lal Bahadur was
entrusted with portfolios for Minister of Railways, Minister of
Communications and later Home Minister. He served as Nehru’s right hand.
On May 27, 1964 Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru died. May of that year Lal
Bahadur Shastri became India’s second Prime Minister. His term is best
known for introducing measures to make India self-sufficient in food
production.
In 1965 Pakistan
attacked India on the Kashmiri front and Lal Bahadur Shastri responded
in kind by punching toward Lahore. In 1966 a cease-fire was issued as a
result of international pressure. Lal Bahadur Shastri went to Tashkent
to hold talks with Ayub Khan and an agreement was soon signed.
Lal Bahadur passed away in Tashkent before returning home. He was posthumously conferred with the Bharat Ratna Award.
Indian Five rupee coins - II
5 rupee, Dandi march(steel)
This
coin was released on the occasion of 75 years of the Dandi march,
which was undertaken by Mahatma Gandhi on the issue of the government
imposing taxes on the salt. the british government had forbidden Indians
from making their own salt, and they were made to pay heavy taxes for
salt.
So
to protest, Gandhiji started walking towards Dandi, a place in
Gujarat, to make his own salt. Thousands of Indians joined him on the
way, and they broke the salt law along with Gandhiji. This event got to
be known as the Dandi march and was one of the turning points in
India's struggle for independence.
5 rupee wave (IT theme), 2007
This
steel 5 rupee coin was minted for two years : 2007 and 2008, and
Information Technology is the theme of the coin. India has witnessed an
IT revolution in the last 20-30 years as it is a low cost destination ,
which is very suitable for outsourcing and maintenace work to be done.
India has emerged as one of the four highly developing economies
(among the BRIC group), and the major reason for that has been the IT
revolution only.
Now,
the Indian government has also realized the important contributions of
the IT industry to the economy, and has minted certain coins on this
theme. A 10 rupee coin with the same theme is also slated to be released
by 2010.
5 rupee, Dandi march: copper-nickel
The
5 rupee of Dandi march in copper- nickel is a rare coin and is
currently valued at above 1000rs. Its value would have gone really high
if it was not released as part of some UNC sets. Many people broke the
sets to sell this loose 5rs, and now the sets have also become rarer.
See also: Dandi march UNC set
5 rupee, Indira Gandhi
Indira
Priyadarshini Gandhi(1917-1984) was the prime minister of India for
three terms, from 1966 to 1977; and fourth term from 1980 to 1984, when
she was assasinated in the wake of operation blue star.
She
is the only female prime minister of India till date, and was the
daughter of Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime minister of independent
India. She married Feroze Gandhi (no relation to Mohandas Karamchand
Gandhi, also called Mahatma Gandhi). She was brought up in a politically
strong and influential household, and after the sudden demise of Lal
Bahadur Shastri, she was thrust into the foremost ranks of congress by
the congress president K.Kamaraj. She made politically correct moves and
very influential, so she came into power. But some inabilities and some
inefficiencies led to the enforcing of the emergency in the late 1970s.
This caused her to be out of power for three years. She also devalued
the rupee from 4 Re to a dollar to 7 Re/dollar, and charges of
corruption were proved against her, but she refused to resign.
In
1984, some extremists in Punjab were in the holy shrine of Darbar sahib
in Amritsar, and she went through with the hard military operation
against those people, forgetting about the place and the civilian
pilgrims there. This operation was named 'operation bluestar', and was
the cause of her assasination at the hands of two of her bodyguards,
Satwant Singh and Beant Singh.
Indian Five Rupee coins - I
5 rupee, K. Kamaraj
The
person shown on the obverse is Kumaraswami Kamaraj, one of India's
political leaders who hailed from the Southern state of Tamil Nadu.
Kamaraj was a kingmaker and worked behind the scenes to elevate people
like Lal Bahadur shastri and Indira Gandhi to the position of Prime
Minister.
Kamaraj
was born into a family of Nadars, the traditional toddy tapping
community in Southern Tamil Nadu, and had little formal education.
Politics attracted Kamaraj at an early age after seeing Mohandas Gandhi at a meeting in the nearby temple city of Madurai.
Kamaraj
quickly joined the Congress party and national resistance against the
British colonists. For his protests against the British, Kamaraj was
thrown into jail several times and spent eight years in prison.
Hailing
from a low caste, Kamaraj naturally threw in his lot with the
non-Brahmins, who were resentful of the domination of the Brahmins in
state politics.
Kamaraj
became Chief Minister of Madras in 1954, a post he held until 1963.
During his stint as Chief Minister, he introduced the mid-day meal
scheme for poor children, a step that was later significantly expanded
by one of his successors M.G.Ramachandran.
Kamaraj
became president of the Congress party in 1964 under the so called
Kamaraj Plan, which led to several senior Congress ministers in
Jawaharlal Nehru's cabinet and Chief Ministers resigning so that they
could devote their energies to revitalizing the party.
Kamaraj
is believed to have led a spartan life unlike most Indian politicians
for whom politics is just an easy way to feather their nest.
Writing in The New York Times, the late Pulitzer Prize winning journalist J.Anthony Lukas described Kamaraj thus:
"Kamaraj's
real achievement, then, has not been in remaking the party but in
manipulating the diverse and disputatious elements within it. His genius
lies in dealing with men as they are, not in changing them, and this
ability is based on a realistc assessment of human nature."
Despite
the DMK-Congress (I) alliance, Kamaraj won the 1971 Parliamentary
elections from the Nagercoil constituency with 58.37% of the total valid
votes polled compared to 31.11% for his DMK rival M.C.Balan. Kamaraj
was the sole victor for the Congress (O) in Tamil Nadu.
After
the 1971 elections, the Congress (O) became completely marginalized in
the country and Kamaraj's influence waned considerably.
A
bachelor, Kamaraj died of a heart attack in Madras (now Chennai) on
October 2. This simple man was honored with India's highest civilian
award Bharat Ratna in 1976.
5 rupees, Jawaharlal Nehru
Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of independent India was
born at Allahabad on 14 November 1889. He was the only son of Motilal
Nehru and Swarup Rani. From the age of 15 to 23 Jawaharlal studied in
England at Harrow, Cambridge and the Inner Temple returning to India in
1912.
Jawaharlal Nehru remained the Prime Minister of India for 17 long years and can rightly be called the architect of modern India. He set India on the path of democracy and nurtured its institution - Parliament, multi-party system, independent judiciary and free press. He encouraged Panjayati Raj institutions.
With the foresight of a statesman he created institutions like Planning Commission, National Science Laboratories and laid the foundation of a vast public sector for developing infrastructure for industrial growth. Besides, developing the public sector, Nehru also wanted to encourage the private sector to establish a social order based on social justice he emphasized the need of planned development. Nehru gave a clear direction to India’s role in the comity of nations with the policy of non alignment and the principle of Panchsheel, the five principles of peaceful coexistence at a time when the rivalries of cold-war were driving the humanity to its doom. His vision was that of extensive application of science and technology and industrialization for better living and liberation from the clutches of poverty, superstition and ignorance. Education to him was very important for internal freedom and fearlessness. It was Nehru who insisted if the world was to exist at all; it must exist as one. He was generous and gracious. Emotional sensitivity and intellectual passion infused his writings, giving them unusual appeal and topicality even today. He was awarded Bharat Ratna in 1955. He never forgot India's great cultural heritage and liked to combine tradition with modernity.
Nehru was a leading figure in India's struggle for independence, and was finally recognized as a political heir to Mahatma Gandhi. He became the first prime minister of independent India when he took the office on 15th August,1947 and gave a speech titled "tryst with destiny". That period was marked by communal riots due to lakhs of migrant refugees after the partition of India,. and Nehru was affected by the omnipresent violence and an atmosphere of apprehension and distrust. He tried to assuage the migrant refugees. But that non-violent attitude of his was also the reason of his two biggest failures: Firstly when Pakistan attacked Kashmir in 1947 and took a significant part of it. Secondly, India faced a humiliation at the hands of China in 1962 and took over 20,000 square kms of Indian territory. He also started the non aligned movement(NAM) along with two other leaders.
Jawaharlal was a prolific writer in English and wrote a number of books like ‘The Discovery of India’, ‘Glimpses of World History’, his autobiography, ‘towards Freedom' (1936) ran nine editions in the first year alone. His work ' The discovery of India' was later adapted into a television serial "Bharat Ek Khoj" which was aired on DoordarshanEmotional sensitivity and intellectual passion infused his writings, giving them unusual appeal & topicality even today. He was awarded Bharat Ratna in 1955.
Pandit Nehru loved children and they call him affectionately as Chacha Nehru. Hie birthday is observed as Children's Day. He believed that children are the future of the nation. Nehru passed away in 1964.
Jawaharlal Nehru remained the Prime Minister of India for 17 long years and can rightly be called the architect of modern India. He set India on the path of democracy and nurtured its institution - Parliament, multi-party system, independent judiciary and free press. He encouraged Panjayati Raj institutions.
With the foresight of a statesman he created institutions like Planning Commission, National Science Laboratories and laid the foundation of a vast public sector for developing infrastructure for industrial growth. Besides, developing the public sector, Nehru also wanted to encourage the private sector to establish a social order based on social justice he emphasized the need of planned development. Nehru gave a clear direction to India’s role in the comity of nations with the policy of non alignment and the principle of Panchsheel, the five principles of peaceful coexistence at a time when the rivalries of cold-war were driving the humanity to its doom. His vision was that of extensive application of science and technology and industrialization for better living and liberation from the clutches of poverty, superstition and ignorance. Education to him was very important for internal freedom and fearlessness. It was Nehru who insisted if the world was to exist at all; it must exist as one. He was generous and gracious. Emotional sensitivity and intellectual passion infused his writings, giving them unusual appeal and topicality even today. He was awarded Bharat Ratna in 1955. He never forgot India's great cultural heritage and liked to combine tradition with modernity.
Nehru was a leading figure in India's struggle for independence, and was finally recognized as a political heir to Mahatma Gandhi. He became the first prime minister of independent India when he took the office on 15th August,1947 and gave a speech titled "tryst with destiny". That period was marked by communal riots due to lakhs of migrant refugees after the partition of India,. and Nehru was affected by the omnipresent violence and an atmosphere of apprehension and distrust. He tried to assuage the migrant refugees. But that non-violent attitude of his was also the reason of his two biggest failures: Firstly when Pakistan attacked Kashmir in 1947 and took a significant part of it. Secondly, India faced a humiliation at the hands of China in 1962 and took over 20,000 square kms of Indian territory. He also started the non aligned movement(NAM) along with two other leaders.
Jawaharlal was a prolific writer in English and wrote a number of books like ‘The Discovery of India’, ‘Glimpses of World History’, his autobiography, ‘towards Freedom' (1936) ran nine editions in the first year alone. His work ' The discovery of India' was later adapted into a television serial "Bharat Ek Khoj" which was aired on DoordarshanEmotional sensitivity and intellectual passion infused his writings, giving them unusual appeal & topicality even today. He was awarded Bharat Ratna in 1955.
Pandit Nehru loved children and they call him affectionately as Chacha Nehru. Hie birthday is observed as Children's Day. He believed that children are the future of the nation. Nehru passed away in 1964.
5 rupee, khadi and village industries(steel)
This
coin marks the 50years of the khadi and village industries
commission.The Khadi and Village Industries Commission is a non-profit
group that serves to promote the use of khādī (a type of hand-woven
cloth) in India. The group is government-run and serves to promote the
use of khādī and small-scale khādī industries.
The group also gives licenses to companies that wish to manufacture the Flag of India.
Khadi
Bhandar chain stores are managed as per the rules and guidelines by
this organisation. These stores serve as outlets for products made by
village industry. It is not restricted to sell khādī only. They also
sell matchsticks, incense sticks, decorative items made from wood and
earth, ahinsak (non-violent) honey, ahinsak leather items etc.
Also
seen on this coin is a picture of Gandhiji, who was a fine exopnent of
the khadi and village industries. Gandhiji wove his clothes on his own charkha, and encouraged everyone to boycott English made goods and use only indigenous hand made products like clothes.
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