REBUTTAL
Vol. 54:3 of the I.B.N.S.
Journal carried an Article by Anil R. Bohora (LM 199) titled: “The Facts on High Denomination British India Banknotes
with Burma Overstamps”.
As a
student, I read the Article very keenly with expectations of a well researched
and properly documented treatise on the subject. As I went along, I soon
realized that the Article lacked any factual basis, is misrepresented and
perhaps the Conclusion was first written and the Article was built around it.
Bohora’s article written backwards:
The
Conclusion and its preceding paragraphs disclose the real purpose of the
Article. The rest of the Article very
clearly discloses that, rather than a bonafide treatise, it is an exercise in
fiction to target imaginary vested interests allegedly Dealers and Auction
Houses whom Bohora accuses of selling genuine British India banknotes with fake
Burma overstamps, to enhance their value, for inflated prices over € 20,000 and
for this castigate I.B.N.S. and its Ethics Committee (for dereliction of duty)
and Authors of a well researched and informative book. This is of course a very serious charge –
unfortunately not backed by any facts.
Bohora
lost sight of the perils of writing a conclusion and then writing an Article to
serve the Agenda and justify the conclusion.
The result is only natural – an Article based on surmises and
conjectures which are wholly devoid of merit and fact and passages which are
baseless.
The
confusion in Bohora’s mind is about Overprinting of Bank Notes
vs. Overstamping of Bank Notes.
Everybody
from the fraternity is aware of the difference between ‘overprinting of bank
notes’ and ‘overstamped bank
notes’.
However,
in the first para of his Article, Bohora discloses that this basic difference
is lost on him. In this para Bohora
states : “ … and auction houses are capitalizing on this activity by offering
higher denomination British India banknotes with Burma overstamps at very high prices. The question is
are these high denomination overprinted notes genuine?”
Thus Bohora uses the different terms overstamps and overprinted
interchangeably.
He
claims that on a closer study of the
overstamps used on British India Bank Notes of Rs.1000 or Rs.10000 (of value
higher than Rs.100) reveal the following facts:
All
lower denomination banknotes (Rs.100 or less) have overprints which are
lithographed.
It’s
a mystery of how Bohora’s close study of Rs.1000 or Rs.10000 Bank Notes (of value higher than Rs.100) revealed that
Rs.100 notes had overprints which were lithographed.
Nonetheless,
Bohora’s tirade is confined to high denomination Indian bank notes of Rs.1000
and Rs.10000 which he contends were not overprinted for use in Burma. He has not given any reference or provided an
image of which Auction House has listed The Government of India Rs.10000
overstamped notes and the notes he closely studied.
Pre
1937, British India included Burma but thereafter Burma ceased to be a province
of British India and was a separately administered British Colony. Government of
India bank notes printed pre 1937 for British India vs. RBI printed Burma
specific bank notes (peacock notes) post 1938 for Burma a separately
administered British colony. RBI
overprinted notes for the Military Administration of Burma and the Burma
Currency Board in 1945.
Bohora
is oblivious to the major difference between the Government of India Bank Notes printed pre
1937 for British India, of which Burma was a Province vs. RBI Bank Notes printed post 1938 for Burma a separately
administered British colony and RBI
overprinted notes for the Military Administration of Burma and the Burma
Currency Board in 1945.
Had
Bohora known the difference, he would not have claimed Smoking Gun evidence
based upon the proceedings of the British Parliament or RBI’s letter dated
November 23, 1970 being the correspondence
between Mr. C. M. Nielsen and the RBI.
This correspondence clearly pertains to RBI notes for “British Military
Administration of Burma, etc. Notes”, which event transpired 8 years later than
1937 i.e. in 1945.
The extract of the letter from Reserve Bank of
India:
Reference : F.No./298/12-70/71 dated November 23,
1970.
British Military Administration of Burma, etc. Notes
…
2. No notes
of denominations higher than Rs.100 were overprinted for Burma.
3. We
confirm that our records differentiate between overprinted notes of “Military
Administration of Burma – Legal Tender in Burma Only” and “Burma Currency Board
– Legal Tender in Burma Only”.
4. “Thus
overprinting of BMA and BCB was also done in the above Press.”
5.
“Regarding supply of overprinted notes, we are unable to assist you in
the matter”.
The
difference between the Government of India Bank Notes for British India and RBI
Bank Notes for Burma as a separate
British Colony are :
Government
of India:
·
Circulated Govt. of India bank notes with portrait of King
George V with circle of issue Rangoon which were in use until 1937.
·
Circulated an urgent interim issue of Govt. of India bank notes
with ‘Legal Tender in Burma Only’ overprinted / overstamped on portrait of King
George V with circle of issue Rangoon for denominations Rs.100, Rs.1000 and
Rs.5, Rs.10 (without circle of issue) in 1937.
Reserve
Bank of India:
·
Printed Burma specific bank notes (peacock notes) with
portrait of King George VI for denominations Rs.5, Rs.10, Rs.100, Rs.1000 and
Rs.10000 in 1938.
·
Overprinted ‘Military Administration of Burma Legal Tender
in Burma Only’ on Reserve Bank of India notes with portrait of King George VI
for denominations Rs.100 (circle of issue Calcutta), Rs.5, Rs.10 (without
circle of issue) and for Re.1 Government of India bank notes with portrait of
King George VI in 1945.
·
Overprinted ‘Burma Currency Board Legal Tender in Burma
Only’ on Reserve Bank of India notes with portrait of King George VI for
denominations Rs.100 (circle of issue Calcutta), Rs.5, Rs.10 (without circle of
issue) and for Re.1 Government of India bank notes with portrait of King George
VI in 1947.
From
the facts above, it is clear that the letter from RBI refers only to the KGVI
portrait notes issued in 1945 / 1947 and is indeed true that “No notes of
denominations higher than Rs.100 were overprinted for Burma” as they pertain to
the BMA and BCB. Thus, Bohora’s reliance on RBI’s letter, dated November 23,
1970 – which only reiterates the obvious and is misrepresented in his article.
In
the proceedings of the British Parliament, Mr. A. Henderson states :
"Mr. A. Henderson .... As regards the
large notes, those of 1,000 and 10,000 denomination, it is, as the Order
indicates, the fact that those notes are not to be regarded as legal tender.
That, of course, does not mean that they will not be legal; but it will mean in
practice that the onus will be put upon those who have them in their possession
to establish that they came into their possession by lawful means. .... "
In other words, high-denomination notes did exist.
In para
1 and subsequent paras of Bohora’s Article it is discernable that his grievance
is that fake high/higher denomination British India banknotes with Burma
overstamps are offered at very high prices.
It is trite to say that any price for a fake or tampered note is too
high. A fake or tampered Note is
worthless and a source of trouble. This
relative concept of very high price for a fake or tampered note – whether
overstamped or overprinted is another instance of confused thinking.
Bohora
is also confused between a Note being a fake because it was never printed and
put into circulation and that of a genuine bank note being printed and put into
circulation but subsequently being rendered a fake by tampering with the Note
by overprinting or overstamping it.
Bohora
closely studied a particular Bank Note of Rs. 1000 with a Burma overstamp and
had a very strong center fold which he accepts is very common on a Note of its
age. As part of his DNA study, he
noticed that the Letter “I” from the text “LEGAL TENDER IN BURMA ONLY” overstamped on the center fold of the Bank Note is intact
and not worn out. If looked at closely,
the Letter ‘I’ has been subject to wear and tear.
I am
enclosing images of the following note numbers of Rs.1000 KGV Rangoon with
overstamp.
1. Note with Serial
Number X/6-094996.
2. Note with Serial
Number X/6-095146.
3. Note with Serial
Number X/6-095958.
4. Note with Serial
Number X/6-097133.
5. Note with Serial
Number X/6-097172.
6. Note with Serial
Number X/6-097173.
All
the fonts of overstamps on these notes are identical. I have yet to observe even an image of a
Rs.1000 Government of India banknote with KGV portrait of Rangoon circle
without any overstamp. Any such note
would certainly command a far greater value than the notes with the overstamp.
Why
would anyone want to deface and devalue any Rs.1000 bank notes of Rangoon with
rubber stamps, which are RARE?
I
have also enclosed the image on page 53 in the RBI Book ‘Mint
Road Milestones RBI at 75’ released by RBI in 2010. The Rs.1000 KGV bearing serial number X/6-097172 is featured.
Road Milestones RBI at 75’ released by RBI in 2010. The Rs.1000 KGV bearing serial number X/6-097172 is featured.
Bohora
should refrain from passing dictums and statements like “IBNS members should not be fooled by fake Burma overstamps on Rs 1000
and, maybe Rs 10,000 British India banknotes and should not pay large sums of
money for them”.
I am sure IBNS members are knowledgeable and will
not part with their money for fake notes.
The listing 5-3-A.1 in The Revised Standard Reference
Guide to Indian Paper Money by Kishore Jhunjhunwalla and Rezwan Razack is legitimate and correct.
1 comment:
Informative blog posted. Thank you for sharing it.
History of Indian Notes
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