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| So   whats so special about this one rupee coin? Minted in 1964 when he died, this   is a commemorative coin of Jawaharlal Nehru like the previous one, and this   was the first commemorative coin issued by the bombay mint, and   probably the first commemorative coin of republic India. | 
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| Any   description of India's history in the British era can never be complete   without the mention of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, better known as   Mahatma Gandhi. Mahatma Gandhi was born in 1869 in Porbandar in Gujrat, and   died in 1948 when he was shot by Nathuram Godse. Mahatma Gandhi was one who   preached non-violence in an era of violence, world wars and all and   successully led the country to independence through non-violent means like   protests etc. The   Gandhis belong to the Bania caste and seem to have been originally grocers.   But for three generations, from Mahatama Gandhi's grandfather, they have been   Prime Ministers in several Kathiawad States. Uttamchand Gandhi, alias Ota   Gandhi, was his grandfather. Ota   Gandhi married a second time, having lost his first wife. He had four sons by   his first wife and two by his second wife.. The fifth of these six brothers   was Karamchand Gandhi, alias Kaba Gandhi, and the sixth was Tulsidas Gandhi.   Both these brothers were Prime Ministers in Porbandar, one after the other. Kaba   Gandhi was Mahatma Gandhi's father. He was a member of the Rajasthanik   Court. It is now extinct, but in those days it was a very influential body   for settling disputes between the chiefs and their fellow clansmen.  Kaba   Gandhi married four times in succession, having lost his wife each time by   death. He had two daughters by his first and second marriages. His last wife,   Putlibai, bore him a daughter and three sons, Mahatma Gandhi being the   youngest. Gandhi   remained in South Africa for twenty years, suffering imprisonment many   times. In 1896, after being attacked and humiliated by white South Africans,   Gandhi began to teach a policy of passive resistance to, and non-cooperation   with, the South African authorities. Part of the inspiration for this policy   came from the Russian writer Leo Tolstoy, whose influence on Gandhi was   profound. Gandhi also acknowledged his debt to the teachings of Christ and to   the 19th-century American writer Henry David Thoreau, especially to Thoreau's   famous essay "Civil Disobedience." Gandhi considered the terms   passive resistance and civil disobedience inadequate for his purposes,   however, and coined another term, Satyagraha (from Sanskrit, "truth and   firmness"). During the Boer War, Gandhi organized an ambulance corps for   the British army and commanded a Red Cross unit. After the war he returned to   his campaign for Indian rights. In 1910, he founded Tolstoy Farm, near   Durban, a cooperative colony for Indians. In 1914 the government of the Union   of South Africa made important concessions to Gandhi's demands, including   recognition of Indian marriages and abolition of the poll tax for them. His   work in South Africa complete, he returned to India. Then   Gandhi became a leader in a complex struggle, the Indian campaign for home   rule. Following World War I, in which he played an active part in recruiting   campaigns, Gandhi, again advocating Satyagraha, launched his   movement of non-violent resistance to Great Britain. When, in 1919,   Parliament passed the Rowlatt Acts, giving the Indian colonial authorities   emergency powers to deal with so-called revolutionary activities, Satyagraha   spread throughout India, gaining millions of followers. A demonstration   against the Rowlatt Acts resulted in a massacre of Indians at Amritsar by British   soldiers; in 1920, when the British government failed to make amends, Gandhi   proclaimed an organized campaign of non-cooperation. Indians in public office   resigned, government agencies such as courts of law were boycotted, and   Indian children were withdrawn from government schools. Throughout India,   streets were blocked by squatting Indians who refused to rise even when   beaten by police. Gandhi was arrested, but the British were soon forced to   release him. Gandhi advocate economic independence by boycotting English   goods. Gandhi   became the international symbol of a free India. He lived a spiritual and   ascetic life of prayer, fasting, and meditation. His union with his wife (Kasturba   Gandhi) became, as he himself stated, that of a brother and sister. Refusing   earthly possessions, he wore the loincloth and shawl of the lowliest Indian   and subsisted on vegetables, fruit juices, and goat's milk. Indians revered   him as a saint and began to call him Mahatma (great-souled), a title reserved   for the greatest sages. Gandhi's advocacy of nonviolence, known as ahimsa   (non-violence), was the expression of a way of life implicit in the   Hindu religion. By the Indian practice of nonviolence, Gandhi held, Great   Britain too would eventually consider violence useless and would leave India. When World   War II broke out, the Congress party and Gandhi demanded a declaration of   war aims and their application to India. As a reaction to the unsatisfactory   response from the British, the party decided not to support Britain in the   war unless the country were granted complete and immediate independence. The   British refused, offering compromises that were rejected. When Japan entered   the war, Gandhi still refused to agree to Indian participation. He was   interned in 1942 but was released two years later because of failing health. By   1944 the Indian struggle for independence was in its final stages,   the British government having agreed to independence on condition that the   two contending nationalist groups, the Muslim League and the Congress party,   should resolve their differences. Gandhi stood steadfastly against the   partition of India but ultimately had to agree, in the hope that internal   peace would be achieved after the Muslim demand for separation had been   satisfied. India and Pakistan became separate states when the British granted   India its independence in 1947 (see: Tryst with Destiny -- the story of   India's independence). During the riots that followed the partition of   India, Gandhi pleaded with Hindus and Muslims to live together peacefully.   Riots engulfed Calcutta, one of the largest cities in India, and the Mahatma   fasted until disturbances ceased. On January 13, 1948, he undertook another   successful fast in New Delhi to bring about peace, but on January 30, 12 days   after the termination of that fast, as he was on his way to his evening   prayer meeting, he was assassinated by a fanatic Hindu, Nathuram Godse. Gandhi's   death was regarded as an international catastrophe. His place in humanity was   measured not in terms of the 20th century, but in terms of history. A period   of mourning was set aside in the United Nations General Assembly,   and condolences to India were expressed by all countries. Religious violence   soon waned in India and Pakistan, and the teachings of Gandhi came to inspire   nonviolent movements elsewhere, notably in the U.S.A. under the civil rights   leader Martin Luther King, Jr. and in South Africa under Nelson   Mandela. Even   though the greatness of Mahatma Gandhi as a leader and his impact on India's   and even world's history is indisputable and unquestionable, yet there was a   faction of revolutionaries in India who believed that if Gandhi had not been   in the picture, there would have been a popular uprising in India and the   British would have have thrown out of India long before 1947, when India   eventually got its independence. This   coin was just one in a series of commemorative coins that were issued in 1969   which happens to be the centenary of Mahatma Gandhi's birth. Coins of   denomination 10 paisa, 20 paisa and 50 paisa were also minted, not to mention   the First 10 rupee coin of republic india, which was composed of 80%   silver. | 
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| Symbol on the   obverse : three lines between a dove and an olive branch. Both are signs of   peace.So in 1985, the youth were urged to bring peace. International Youth Year, or IYY, was held in 1985, to focus attention on issues of concern to and relating to youth. The proclamation was signed on January 1, 1985 by United Nations Secretary General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar. Throughout the year, activities took place all over the world. These activities were coordinated by the Youth Secretariat within the Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs, at the time based at the UN offices in Vienna, Austria. The Secretariat's director, Mohammad Sharif, was also the Executive Secretary for IYY. The President of IYY was Nicu Ceauşescu , son of the former dictator of Romania Nicolae Ceauşescu. While not organising any specific events itself, under the year's slogan of "Participation, Development, Peace", the IYY Secretariat helped facilitate numerous events helping to make IYY a success. The main UN event for IYY was the World Congress on Youth (in Spanish: Congreso Mundial Sobre La Juventud) organised by UNESCO and held in Barcelona, Spain July 8-15, 1985. It issued the "Barcelona Declaration" on youth. | 
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| We all know that   the water table is continuously going down due to excessive and unmindful   usage. Harvesting rainwater for domestic and farming purposes is a solution   to replenishing the depleted water table, and this is the reason the   government started advocating rainfed farming in 1988. | 
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| This   one rupee coin was released on the occasion of the centenary of Pt.   Jawaharlal Nehru, who was the first prime minster of independent India. On   the same occasion, a stamp on the same was also released in the erstwhile   USSR. 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 emphasised 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 industrialisation   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 twio 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. Emotional   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. | 
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| We can see BhimRao   Ramji Ambedkar , also known as Babasaheb Ambedkar on the obverse. Dr.   B.R.Ambedkar was the architect of India's constitution. He was born   into an untouchable family and spent his life fighting the prejudices and the   discrimination base on which the Hindu society was divided into four classes,   or the Chaturvarna: the Brahmans, the Kshatriyas, the Vaishyas   and the Shudras. Facing numerous social and   financial obstacles,   which were seemingly insurmountable, Ambedkar went overseas and returned a   scholar having multiple doctorates with extensive research in the fields of   law, economics and political science from Columbia university and the London   school of economics. Ambedkar led an   extensive fight against the practice and prejudices of untouchability. He   became an active member of the Bombay legislative assembly in 1926  and   in 1927 he started some movements against untouchability.He began with public   movements and marches to open up and share public drinking water resources,   also he began a struggle for the right to enter Hindu temples. He led a   satyagraha in Mahad to fight for the right of the untouchable community to   draw water from the main water tank of the town. He is also credited   with having sparked the Dalit Buddhist movement. Ambedkar has been honoured   with the Bharat Ratna, India's highest civilian award. | 
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| I.C.D.S. stands for   integrated child development services. The children are the most   important aspect for Human Resource development as it is in the first 5-6   years of our lives that the foundations for cognitive, social, emotional and   physical/motor development and also for life long learning. The government   acknowledged this fact and launched the integrated child development   services(ICDS) in 1975 with a view for holistic development of the child. The objectives of   ICDS: 1)Lay the   foundation for proper psychological development of the child 2)Improve   nutritional & health status of children 0-6 years 3)Reduce incidence   of mortality, morbidity, malnutrition and school drop-outs 4)Enhance the   capability of the mother and family to look after the health, nutritional and   development needs of the child 5)Achieve effective   coordination of policy and implementation among various departments to   promote child development The services of   ICDS include supplementary nutrition, non-formal pre school education,   immunization, health check-up, referral services and nutrition and health   education. The pulse polio   immunization campaign is the most well known initiative undertaken by   ICDS. | 
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| 1990 was designated   as the SAARC(South Asian Association for regional cooperation) year of the   girl child. SAARC comprises of Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India,   Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. The primary aim of SAARC is to   promote peace, stability, amity and progress in the given countries. I got the shown one rupee as change from the post office. | 
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| The world's worst   recorded food disaster happened in 1943 in British-ruled India. Known as the   Bengal Famine, an estimated four million people died of hunger that year   alone in eastern India (that included today's Bangladesh). The initial theory   put forward to 'explain' that catastrophe was that there as an acute   shortfall in food production in the area. However, Indian economist Amartya   Sen (recipient of the Nobel Prize for Economics, 1998) has established   that while food shortage was a contributor to the problem, a more potent   factor was the result of hysteria related to World War II which made food   supply a low priority for the British rulers. The hysteria was further   exploited by Indian traders who hoarded food in order to sell at   higher prices. During the period   from 1967 to 1978, India witnessed a green revolution. Between 1947   and 1967, efforts at achieving food self-sufficiency were not entirely   successful. Efforts until 1967 largely concentrated on expanding the farming   areas. But starvation deaths were still being reported in the newspapers. In   a perfect case of Malthusian economics, population was growing at a much   faster rate than food production. This called for drastic action to increase   yield. The action came in the form of the Green Revolution. As a "side   effect" of India moving from the status of a food surplus nation from   being a food deficit nation with the green revolution, a number of different   commemorative coins were minted during that era on themes related to food,   work, shelter and all. These two coins shown here are in that series only. | 
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| Rajiv Gandhi (20 August   1944 – 21 May 1991), the elder son of Indira and Feroze Gandhi, was   the 9th Prime Minister of India from his mother's death on 31 October 1984   until his resignation on 2 December 1989 following a general election defeat.   He became the youngest Prime Minister of India when he took office (at the   age of 40). Rajiv Gandhi was a   professional pilot for Indian Airlines before entering politics. While at   Cambridge, he met Italian-born Sonia Maino whom he later married, who   is now supposedly the hand pulling the strings behind the current prime   minister Manmohan Singh. Rajiv Gandhi remained aloof from politics despite   his mother being the Indian Prime Minister , and it was only following the   death of his younger brother Sanjay Gandhi in 1980 that Rajiv entered   politics. After the assassination of his mother in 1984 after Operation Blue   Star, Indian National Congress party leaders nominated him to be Prime   Minister. Rajiv Gandhi led   the Congress to a major election victory in 1984 soon after and lost soon after   due to racism, amassing the largest majority ever in Indian Parliament. The   Congress party won 411 seats out of 542. He began dismantling the License   Raj - government quotas, tariffs and permit regulations on economic   activity - modernized the telecommunications industry, the education system,   expanded science and technology initiatives and improved relations with the   United States. In 1988, Rajiv   reversed the coup in Maldives antagonising the militant Tamil outfits such as   PLOTE. He also was responsible for sending Indian troops (Indian Peace   Keeping Force or IPKF) for peace efforts in Sri Lanka, which soon ended in   open conflict with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) group. In   mid-1987, the Bofors scandal broke his honest, corruption-free image   and resulted in a major defeat for his party in the 1989 elections. . Apart from the   bofors scandal, Rajiv's major failure was in checking inflation as during the   early 1980's, the rupee fell from 12 to 17 per dollar. He also efforts to   enable significant developments in India. He introduced measures   significantly reducing the License Raj, allowing businesses and individuals   to purchase capital, consumer goods and import without bureaucratic   restrictions. In 1986, he announced a national education policy to modernize   and expand higher education programs across India. He founded the Jawahar   Navodaya Vidyalaya System in 1986. His efforts created MTNL in   1986, and his public call offices, better known as PCOs, helped spread   telephones in rural areas. Rajiv Gandhi   remained Congress President until the elections in 1991. While campaigning,   he was assassinated by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)   group.His widow Sonia Gandhi became the leader of the Congress party   in 1998, and led the party to victory in the 2004 elections. His son Rahul   Gandhi is a Member of Parliament and the General Secretary of All India   Congress Committee. Rajiv Gandhi was   posthumously awarded the Highest National Award of India, Bharat Ratna,   joining a list of 40 luminaries, including Indira Gandhi | 
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| The Commonwealth   Parliamentary Association, previously known as the Empire Parliamentary   Association, is an organsation, of British origin, which works to support   good governance, democracy and human rights. It was founded as the Empire   Parliamentary Association in 1911, with its first branches being Australia,   Canada, Newfoundland, New Zealand, South Africa and the United Kingdom, the   latter branch administering the association as a whole. In 1948 the   association changed its name to the current Commonwealth Parliamentary   Association, and allowed all branches part in administration of the   organisation. The branches are grouped into nine Commonwealth regions -   Africa; Asia; Australia; British Islands and Mediterranean; Canada;   Caribbean, Americas and Atlantic; India; Pacific, and South-East Asia. As of 1989, the   organisation acknowledges a Patron - the Head of the Commonwealth; Her   Majesty Queen Elizabeth II - and a Vice Patron, the head of state or of the   government of the branch holding the upcoming conference. The association's   supreme authority is the General Assembly, constituted by delegates to the   annual Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference. The business and activities are   managed by an Executive Committee, which reports to the General Assembly. The   association's funds are obtained from membership fees paid by its branches,   as well as from two trust funds and various other sources. The 37th   commonwealth parliamentary conference was held at the Indian parliament   in New Delhi and commemorative coins were issued for the same. | 
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| The figure shown on   the obverse is a stylized peacock. The peacock is the national bird of   India.This coin was minted in 1991 when India was trying to promote itself as   a tourist destination. | 
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| India was under   British rule for about 200 years and in the first half of the 20th century,   the freedom struggle was greatly influenced by people like Mahatma Gandhi and   their ideas and principles of non-violence which struck a chord with the   masses as the majority of the population of India is peace loving. On the   verge of the second world war, the quit India movement was started in India   in 1942; and this coin was released on the occasion of 50 years or golden   jubilee of the quit India movement. With the outbreak of the war in 1939, Britain had declared war on Germany. Churchill had become Prime Minister and India's support was required as India was a colony of Britain only. Gandhi declined support as India was against Fascism and they saw British colonialism to be no different than German totalitarianism. The viceroy said that after the war was waged for peace and after it finishes, changes would be made in the Act of 1935. And Gandhi said " We have asked for bread and got a stone in return." This was the primary cause for the quit India movement of 1942. Another important reason was the failure of the Cripps commission. sir Stafford Cripps was sent to India to talk terms and lots was offered ; but after the war ceased. This was perceived to be a "post dated cheque on a crashing bank. Other factors were the Japanese invasion of India, unrest in East Bengal and and growing feeling that British were unable to protect India and its interests. The Mahatma had said that the presence of the British was an open invitation to the Japanese, and their removal from the scene would remove the bait... Following this statement , he was arrested shortly afterward; along with other leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad. Gandhi's cry of do or die reached the masses and the country erupted in the quit India movement. This movement was marked by four phases: 1)There were mass strikes, demonstrations, protests and rallies 2) in the second stage there were some violent incidents.Mobs targeted government and municipal buildings like post office and railway stations. Some were set on fire , and in some firings a number of women and children died 3)It is said that in the third stage there were incidents of the mob throwing bombs at the police. 4)The last stage went peaceful until the release of Gandhi in 1944 when the movement was called off. | 
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| The government of   India adopted the National Nutrition policy under the aegis of department of   women's and child development in 1993. Food and nutrition   board is primarily engaged in Nutrition Education and Training Activities,   Mass Awareness Campaigns, Promotion of Infant and Young Child Nutrition and   Follow Up Action on instruments of National Nutrition Policy. Five-day Training   of Trainers (TOT) courses for orienting medical officers, senior supervisors,   LHVs etc on various aspects of nutrition are organized. These master trainers   in turn organise two-day Orientation Training Courses for the grassroot level   functionaries particularly of ICDS and health besides volunteers from the   community. Advertisement   campaign for the purpose of mass awareness was generated during 2006 – 1) 2 half page (1   colored ad on 1.8.2006 and 1 Black & white on 7.8.2006) advertisements   during the World Breastfeeding Week. 2) 2 half page (1   colored ad on 1.9.2006 and 1 black & white on 7.9.2006) advertisements   during National Nutrition Week. 3) One half page   color advertisement on 2nd October on the eve of Integrated Child Development   Nutrition (ICDS). 4) One half page   colored advertisement on World Food Day on the theme ‘Invest in Agriculture   for Food Security’ highlighting the importance of diversified diet for better   nutrition, health and development. 5) Half page black   and white advertisement on Global Iodine Deficiency Disorders Prevention Day   highlighting the importance of consumption of iodised salt in our daily diet. Special awareness   generation programmes like Orientation Training Course, community meetings,   camps, essay competitions, healthy baby shows etc, were also held during   these events. | 
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| Established in   1889, the inter parliamentary union is a body which signifies unity between   the parliaments or senates of different countries. In 1993, the 89th inter   parliamentary union conference was held at New Delhi in the Indian   parliament. The main objective of the union is to achieve peace and   coordination between the different member countries. Apart from the 89th   conference , the 57th conference was also held at Delhi. | 
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| In   1989, the United Nations declared that 1994 would be the international year   of the family. The Indian government launched a coin made in stainless steel   marking the year of the family. The objective of the UN was to raise   awareness regarding family issues in the local, national and international   organizations. Many universities in the field of human development also held   presentations, symposiums and all in order to spread awareness regarding the   different issues of a family. The observance of the year served to highlight   the role of the family as the basic social unit in every society and the need   to pay adequate attention to the family dimension in development efforts. The   significance of the International Year of the Family lies in its   reinforcement of the interrelationship between family well-being and   sustainable development. The   tenth anniversary of the international year of the family was observed in   2004. India   has for long had a policy of "hum do, hamare do" for family   planning and to keep a control on the population increase. The phrase means   that a family of two (husband and wife) is urged to not have more than two   children. And this created an almost stereotyped image of an Indian family   for the Indian government, that is the man, his wife, one son and one   daughter; and this is most probably the reason we see that sort of a picture   of a family on this coin. | 
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| 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. | 
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| This   coin was released on the occasion of India's 50th anniversary of independence   in 1997 by the then president Mr.K.R.Narayanan, and he also gave a a   moving speech at the Jail to honour the former inmates of the cellular jail   in Port Blair, Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The jail was established during   India's struggle for independence with the view to send the freedom fighters   to some deserted islands, so that their links to their families and communities   would  be severed and they would be forgotten into oblivion. The   sentencing to the cellular jail was known as "saza-e-kalapani"   and was the most dreaded punishment at that time if you were caught by the   British government, probably even more dreaded than capital punishment. When   the sepoy mutiny and the first all India war of independence was supressed,   most of the freedom fighters were killed by hanging, bound to cannons and   blown to bits or killed by guns and swords. Those who survived were sent to   the Andaman Islands , where the only human inhabitants were the local tribes   or Adivasis, like the Australian Aborigines. The island was a pure   jungle.  Now,   the history of the cellular jail is as fascinating as it is horrendous, as   romantic as it is tragic. Unfortunately when the Japanese captured the   Andaman Islands during the second world war, they burned down whatever was   there, and all of the records that the British had kept were obliterated.   This was a great loss to India's history as even though the British were   exploiters, but they were also great record keepers. Even though extensive   research has been done by the subsequent governments of India post   independence, precious little has been found to establish the chronicles of   the cellular jail. The   earliest revolutionaries to be sent to the Andaman islands had to face the   worst treatment. In perennial rainy weather and marshy land, with snakes,   scorpions etc around them and bound by heavy shackles, chains and fetters,   they had to cut trees to clear paths in the jungle. They got flogged every   time they slowed down and were not even given a full meal in a day. After the   revolt of 1857, prisoners from national revolutionary movements, Alipore   conspiracy case, Gadar party revolutionaries, Assembly bomb case, second   Lahore conspiracy case, and from the Chittagong revolt of 1930 were also   kept. The most famous inmate of the Jail was Veer Vinayak Damodar Savarkar   (1883-1966) The   prisoners in the jail got highly inhuman treatment. According to Savarkar   Freedom Fighters were made to do hard labour. They had to peel coconuts and   take out oil from them. They were forced to go around like bullocks to take   out oil from mustard seeds. Outside they were forced to clear the jungles and   trees on hillside levelling marshy land. They were flogged on refusal. On top   of this they did not even get a full meal every day.The food that was given   was not fit for human consumption. There were worms when you opened the bread   and wild grass was boiled and served in lieu of vegetables. Rain drinking   water was full of insects and worms. The 13' X 6' cells were dark and damp   and dingy thickly coated with moss. There were no toilets. There were no   lights, no reading material. Prisoners were not allowed to meet with each   other. The guards carried out physical torture and flogging. Their behaviour   was insulting. Things had become unbearable. So as   a result, the only alternative before the freedom fighters was to resort to a   hunger strike against these atrocities. On 12 May 1933 they started a fast   undo death. Mahavir Singh, Mohan Kishore Namo Das and Mohit Moitra died   during this hunger strike. Their bodies were quietly ferreted away and thrown   out to sea. Punjab's jail inspector Barker was called to break the hunger   strike. He issued orders to stop the issuing of drinking water. The freedom   fighters were resolute. There was a huge outcry throughout India because of   this hunger strike. After 46 days the British Raj had to bow and the demands   of the freedom fighters had to be accepted. The hunger strike ended on 26   June 1933. After   the death of three colleagues the facilities won from jail authorities proved   beneficial for the future. There was light in the cells. The prisoners   started getting newspapers, books and periodicals. They were allowed to meet.   The facility to read individually or on a collective basis was allowed. The   opportunity to play sports and organise cultural events was given. The jail   work was reduced to minimal. Above all there was respect for the freedom   fighters from the prison officials and a marked improvement in their   behaviour. A new environment was created as the freedom fighters met to   discuss and read. A thirst for books and knowledge began. There were   students, doctors, lawyers, peasants, and workers all together. They   discussed politics, economics, history and philosophy.  There   were classes in biology and physiology given by the doctors amongst them.   Others gave classes in historical and dialectical materialism. Knowledge,   experience and books were hungrily shared. A jail library was started. A   veritable university of freedom fighters had begun where revolutionaries were   learning about Marxist and socialist ideas and how to disseminate these   amongst the people whose freedom they were fighting for. A Communist   consolidation was formed of 39 prisoners on 26 April 1935. This number later   swelled to 200. The freedom fighters started feeling that the atmosphere for   a world war was gathering and that before the war starts we should get back   to our country to be with our people and take active part in the upheaval   that was imminent. A petition was sent to the Viceroy on 9 July 1937 by the   freedom fighters that all political prisoners should be repatriated to the   mainland and released An ultimatum was given that if these demands were not   met a hunger strike would begin. A   second hunger strike began for the repatriation of freedom fighters on 25th   July 1937.A country wide movement on the mainland in support of the demands   of the Andaman freedom fighters began as other political prisoners in other   jails on the mainland also started hunger strikes in support. There was a   mass demonstration of working people, intellectuals and students. This   upsurge clearly showed that their people on the mainland did not forget them.   After four weeks telegrams from Bengal's chief minister, leaders of the   nation Jawaharlal Nehru, Subhash Chandra Bose, Sharad Chandra Bose, Rabindra   Nath Tagore etc poured in imploring the freedom fighters to end their hunger   strike.On 28 August 1937, Gandhiji, poet Rabindra Nath Tagore and the   Congress Working Committee sent a telegram…"the whole nation appeals to   you to end the hunger strike… and assures you to take up your demands and to   see them fulfilled…" After a lot of deliberation and discussion this   historic 36-day hunger strike of 200 revolutionary freedom fighters ended.   The process of repatriation started in September 1937.  Netaji   Subhash Chandra Bose's Azad Hind Fauz first of all gave independence to Port   Blair, Andaman. Netaji visited the Andaman Island and hoisted the tricolour   flag on 30 December 1943. He had declared that the very first bastion to be   relieved of the British yolk was Andamans, the Indian Bastille revolutionary   freedom fighters were kept, very much like the Bastille in Paris during the   French Revolution. The British reoccupied the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and   abolished the Penal Settlement in 1945. The   Japanese destroyed two of the wings of the cellular jail during their brief   occupation of the Andamans. Post independence the demolition of the jail was   started(dont know or understand the logic behind it) and two more wings were   destroyed. The former inmates of the jail intervened and the remaining three   wings were spared, and the jail is now a national memorial in 1969, and the   Gobind Vallabh Pant hospital was also started. In   2004, parts of the jail were damamged by the Indian Ocean tsunami. | 
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| Sant   Dnyaneshwar was a Marathi poet, philosopher, saint and a yogi of Nath   tradition. His works Bhavarth Deepika Teeka and Amrutanubhav   are considered to be milestones in Marathi literature. Bhavarth deepika   teeka is an analysis of the bhagwad Gita and is also called Dnyaneshwari.   Dnyaneshwar entered into "sanjeevan samadhi", a yogic path to   salvation at 21 in Alandi, Maharashtra.Dnyaneshwar was the second of four   children, the first being Nivruttinath, and the other two being Sopandeo and   Muktabai of Vitthal Govind Kulkarni and Rukmini. Vitthal had studied the   Vedas and was more intereted in "the search of god", but Rukmini's   father Shridharpant was impressed of Vitthal and convinced him to marry his   daughter. Vitthal's   inclination was still towards sainthood and he somehow convinced his   reluctant wife to let him leave the Grihastha ashram (tied to his home and   family) and enter Sanyas ashram(to live a life of celibacy and sainthood) .   He went to Ramanand Swami and found acceptance after lying about his past and   hiding his married life. Ramanand   Swami once came to Alandi and blessed Rukmimi "ashta putra saubhagyavati   bhava" (you may have 8 sons). Rukmini broke down and told her story.   Ramanda Swami came to the conclusion that Vitthal was her husband and he had   deserted his wife and home. So he told Vitthal to leave the sanyas and follow   his duties in his home. This caused Vitthal's expulsion from the Brahmin   community as he had reverted back to "Grihastha ahsram" after   "Sanyas ashram" , which was the last ashram.  Meanwhile,   the pious couple had four children. Vitthal tried to get acceptance into the   Brahmin community of Paithan but failed, and the couple were told to end   their lives. The family went on a pilgrimage and Vitthal and Rukmini jumped   into the waters of Prayag at the confluence of Ganga and Yamuna, hoping that   their children would get acceptance into the community.  The   orphaned children lived on alms for a while, and afterwards tried to get   acceptance into the community, and were accepted on the condition of   celibacy. Nivruttinath took Dnyaneshwar and the other two siblings under his tutelage,   and later on not only Dnyaneshwar , but the other three also became highly   revered saints in their capacity. | 
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| Jay   Prakash Narayan was also popularly known as JP, and is well known for leading   the opposition against Indira Gandhi. He had called for a total revolution in Bihar but Indira Gandhi implemented the emergency rule bypassing all laws, even as JP Narayan had called for resignation from the Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi. He gathered a large crowd of about 100,000 at Ramlila grounds and recited poetry by Ramdhari Singh Dinkar:" singhasan khali karo ke janata ati hai". It was under his guidance that the Janata party came into power for the first time after the emergency had been revoked. In 1977 he had a kidney failure and had to be on dialysis for the rest of his life. In March 1979, he had a very deteriorating health and was erroneously declared dead and there was widespread mourning in the country: closure of parliament and government bodies, schools , shops and all. When he got to know of this mistake a few weeks later, he smiled. He passed away in October 1979. | 
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| Maharana   Pratap Singh was a ruler of Mewar and belonged to the Sisodiya clan of   Suryavanshi Rajputs. Maharana Pratap Singh is believed to be the epitome of   fiery Rajput pride and self-respect; he has exemplified the qualities to   which Rajputs aspire for centuries. Maharana Pratap Singh was born as the   eldest child among 25 brothers and 20 sisters at Kumbhalgarh on May 9, 1540   to Maharana Udai Singh II and Maharani Javanta Bai Songara (Chauhan). The   birthplace of Maharana Pratap Singh is known as Juni Kacheri. Maharana Pratap Singh, Ruler of MewarIn 1568, during the reign of Udai Singh II, the Mughal emperor Akbar conquered Chittor. The third Jauhar of Chittor became apparent, with the ladies of the fort finding safety from personal dishonour and plunged themselves into fire, while rest of the men folk sallied forth to certain death in the battlefield. Before this condition, Udai Singh and his family had moved to the safety of the nearby hills. He later moved base to another location in the foothills of the Aravalli Range. This new foundation gradually became the city of Udaipur and was accordingly named after him. Udai Singh wished Jagmal, his favorite son could succeed him but his senior nobles wanted Pratap, the eldest son, to be their king. During the coronation ceremony Jagmal was actually moved out of the palace and Pratap was deliberately made the king. Pratap did not want to go against the desire of his father but Rajput nobles convinced him strongly that Jagmal was not capable to rule in the crucial times of the day. It was the beginning of a career of struggle and hardship for Maharana Pratap Singh. Maharana Pratap Singh never believed Akbar as the ruler of India, and kept on fighting with Akbar all his life. Akbar first tried several diplomatic ways to win over Maharana Pratap but nothing really worked. Maharana Pratap Singh maintained that he had no intention to fight with Akbar, however he could not bow down to Akbar and accept him as the ruler. There was some possibility that Maharana Pratap Singh could have become friends with Akbar, but in the invasion for Chittor Akbar had killed around 30,000 civilians, unarmed residents of Chittor only because they refused to convert to Islam. This left an ever-lasting impression on Maharana Pratap Singh`s mind and he adamant not to bow to such an injustice and cruelty. | 
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| Early   life Durgadas   was a suryavanshi Rathore Rajput, belonging to the Karnot branch of the   Rathore clan. He was the son of Askaran Rathore, a Rajput general in the army   of Maharaja Jaswant Singh. As his mother did not get along with her husband   and co-wives, she lived away from Jodhpur, and Durgadas grew up in a small   village. When   Durgadas was young, a camelherd, rearing the herds of the Maharaja, ventured   into Durgadas's fields. Durgadas asked the camel herd to take his herd away   and not destroy the field. The camelherd paid no heed. Durgadas unsheathed   his sword and killed him. Word of this reached Maharaja Jaswant Singh. He   summoned Durgadas and asked him why he killed the camelherd. Durgadas told   him that the royal herd of camels was giving Jaswant Singh a bad name by   destroying the crops of ordinary people. The Maharaja was very impressed with   Durgadas's uprightness and gave him an appointment in the army. Saving   Ajit Singh Maharaja   Jaswant Singh, ruler of Marwar, died in 1679 without immediate male heirs.   However, two of his wives were pregnant at the time of his death. These   circumstances allowed the mughal emperor Aurangzeb to intervene; he appointed   a Muslim to rule over Marwar, which upset the Rathod clan a great deal. One   of Jaswant Singh's pregnant widows gave birth, in due course, to a male   child, who was named Ajit Singh. After the birth of this rightful heir,   prominent grandees of Marwar, including Durgadas, went to Delhi along with   the infant Ajit Singh and asked Aurangzeb that the infant be confirmed in his   late father's estates and titles. Aurangzeb did not absolutely refuse, but   suggested, supposedly for the infant's own safety, that Ajit grow up in Delhi   in front of him. The   nurturing of the head of the Rathod clan in Aurangzeb's staunchly muslim   household was not acceptable to the clan. It is said that crown prince Ajit   Singh along with his mother was staying at a place called "Bhuli   Bhatiyari" near Jhandewalan of modern Delhi. Durgadas and others of   the delegation resolved upon smuggling Ajit Singh out of Delhi. Durgadas and   his 300 men, notable among them Thakur Mokam singh Balunda and Mukand Das   Khichi made a plan. According to the plan Mokam Singh Balunda's wife   Bagheliji put her infant girl, in place of Ajit Singh. As they approached the   outskirts of the city, the mughal guards fell in hot pursuit and Durgadas and   his companions had to make their escape while fighting hand-to-hand battle   with the much larger mughal army. Every so often, some 15-20 Rajputs would   fall behind to check the mughal pursuers, in the process getting themselves   killed. In this battle Mokam singh Balunda, his son Hari singh Balunda got   injured, but they managed to keep distance between the forward party and the   Mughals.Among them Mokam singh Balunda's wife Bagheli Rani This continued   till the evening; Durgadas was left with just seven men out of the 300 he   started with, but he managed to escape with the infant Ajit Singh to safety   to Balunda. Mokam Singh's wife Bagheliji kept Maharaja Ajit singh at Balunda   for almost one year, Later, he was moved to the safety of Aravali hills near   Abu Sirohi, a remote town on the southern fringes of Marwar, and grew up in   anonymity. For   20 years after this event, Marwar remained under the direct rule of a Mughal   governor. During this period, Durgadas carried out a relentless struggle   against the occupying forces. Trade routes that passed through the region   were plundered by the guerillas, who also looted various treasuries in   present-day Rajasthan and Gujarat. These disorders adversely impacted the   finances of the empire. Durgadas   took advantage of the disturbances following the death of Aurangzeb in 1707,   to seize Jodhpur and eventually evict the occupying Mughal force. Ajit Singh   was proclaimed Maharaja of Jodhpur. He rebuilt all the temples that had been   descecrated by the occupying muslims. Character Aurangzeb's   son Sultan Muhammad Akbar rebelled against his father. Naturally, Durgadas   extended aid to him in the rebellion. This venture came to naught, as Akbar   died in exile; he left his children in the custody of Durgadas. Aurangzeb   became extremely anxious to get his grandchildren back. He requested   Durgadas, who agreed to send them to Aurangzeb. When the children arrived,   Aurangzeb asked a Qazi to start teaching them the Quran. On hearing this, his   little granddaughter began reciting ayats from the holy book. Aurangzeb was   left dumbfounded. On being asked, his granddaughter told him that while she   was in Durgadas's custody, a Qazi had been engaged to take care of their   religious training. Such   was Durgadas. Till today, people in Rajasthan pray: Mayee ehra poot jan   jehara DURGADAS, baandh mundaso rakhiyo bin thambe aakash. (Mother,   give birth to a son just like Durgadas,who stopped the flooding dam of   Moghuls (the Moghul Army) without any support (i.e. single handedly)). Last   breath Veer Durgadas   after completing his duties successfully and fulfilled the promise which he   given to Jaswant Singh Ji, left Jodhpur and live in Sadri, Udaipur, Rampura,   Bhanpura for some time and then left to worship Mahakaal at Ujjain. On 22nd   November 1718, on the banks of the Sipra at Ujjain, Durgadas passed away at   the age of 81 years, his beautiful canopy in red stone is still at the   Chakrathirth, Ujjain, which is pilgrimage for all freedom fighters and   rajputs. Veer Durgadas left behind a shining example of loyalty, chivalry and   courage. | 
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| The   Indian Postal Service, with 155,333 post offices, is the most widely   distributed post office system in the world (China is next, with 57,000). The   large numbers are a result of a long tradition of many disparate postal   systems which were unified in the Indian Union post-Independence. Owing to   this far-flung reach and its presence in remote areas, the Indian postal   service is also involved in other services such as small savings banking and   financial services. History Ibn   Battuta describes the Indian postal system in the 14th century as follows: In   India the postal system is of two kinds. The horsepost, called uluq, is run   by royal horses stationed at a distance of every four miles. The foot-post   has three stations per mile; it is called dawa, that is one-third of a mile   ... Now, at every third of a mile there is a wellpopulated village, outside   which are three pavilions in which sit men with girded loins ready to start.   Each of them carries a rod, two cubits in length, with copper bells at the   top. When the courier starts from the city he holds the letter in one hand and   the rod with its bells on the other; and he runs as fast as he can. When the   men in the pavilion hear the ringing of the bell they get ready. As soon as   the courier reaches them, one of them takes the letter from his hand and runs   at top speed shaking the rod all the while until he reaches the next dawa.   And the same process continues till the letter reaches its destination. This   foot-post is quicker than the horse-post; and often it is used to transport   the fruits of Khurasan which are much desired in India." The   British East India Company established post offices in Mumbai, Chennai and   Kolkata from 1764-1766, each serving the Bombay, Madras and Calcutta   presidencies. During Warren Hastings' governorship, postal service was made   available to the general public. A letter would cost 2 annas (one-eighth of a   Rupee) for distances up to 100 miles (160 km). Payments would be done through   copper tokens; a letter was hand stamped "post paid" if paid for,   otherwise it was stamped "post unpaid" or "bearing". In 1839,   North West Province Circle was formed and since then, new Postal Circles were   formed as needed. In December 1860 Punjab Circle, in 1861 Burma Circle, in   1866 Central Province Circle and in 1869 Sind Circle were formed. By 1880   circles had been formed in Oudh (1870), Rajputana (1871), Assam (1873), Bihar   (1877), Eastern Bengal (1878) and Central India (1879). Afterwards,   the creation of new circles was accompanied by the merging of some circles.   By 1914, there were only 7 Postal Circles — Bengal & Assam, Bihar &   Orissa, Bombay (including Sind), Burma, Central, Madras, Punjab & NWF and   U.P. The   different postal services include speed post, ePayment, logistics   payment, e-Post, business post, media post, direct post, postal life   insurance, instant money order, instant money transfer, non-postal services   and adress proof cards | 






















































 
 
  
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