Introduction Management has become a part and parcel in everyday life, be it at home, office, factory, Government, or in any other organization where a group of human beings assemble for a common purpose, management principles come into play through th
Temple
Published on July 31, 2004 By bhattathiri In Religion
Tirupati Temple's Eight Tons of Gold Ornaments
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TIRUPATI, INDIA, June 15, 2004: If you donate more you will get more.The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanam (TTD), the second richest religious body in the world after the Vatican, is facing a problem of plenty. As much as 8,000 kg of studded ornaments, to be precise. The Devasthanam is not authorized to dispose of gold jewelry studded with stones, presented by the devotees of Lord Venkateshwara. Not that the cash-rich Devasthanam wants to sell the jewelry for any financial need, but the sheer volume of these ornaments accumulated over a period of time, has forced it to think what to do with them. The temple trust has eight tons of these jewelry lying in its lockers. Now, if one were to calculate the value of the jewelry by treating it as only made up of gold, ignoring the value of the stones, it works out to a whopping US$100 million.

The board has approached the state government to authorize the Devasthanam to dispose of the gold jewelry studded with stones, as it has become a difficult proposition to maintain the treasure. The state government, on its part, has been examining the Devasthanam's proposal with due consideration of the "sentiment" attached to these offerings to Lord Venkateshwara. The temple trust regularly sends the gold ornaments, which are not studded with stones, to the Mumbai mint. It gets them back in the form of 22 carat coins for selling. And these coins are quite popular with Lord Venkateshwara's devotees worldwide. On average, the hundi, or the metal safe for the offerings, each week receives about 10 kg of gold ornaments from the devotees. According to the act that governs the functioning of the Devasthanam, all gold offerings can either remain as ornaments of Lord Venkateshwara, or can be melted in to coins and be sold to the devotees. As the Act does not provide for stone-studded ornaments, the state government has to take a call on the question of disposing of these stone-studded gold ornaments.

source. hpi.inda

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