The "La Vie en Rose" series issued by the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2001 belongs to a wave of novelty collector coinage that flooded the market after the country began licensing its minting rights to European producers — primarily in Belgium and Germany — during the late 1990s. The DRC had no meaningful domestic coin production infrastructure at the time, and these pieces were never intended for circulation. They were struck purely as retail collectibles sold through international distributors.
Édith Piaf's song dates to 1945, written during the post-Liberation euphoria in Paris.
The "La Vie en Rose" series issued by the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2001 belongs to a wave of novelty collector coinage that flooded the market after the country began licensing its minting rights to European producers — primarily in Belgium and Germany — during the late 1990s. The DRC had no meaningful domestic coin production infrastructure at the time, and these pieces were never intended for circulation. They were struck purely as retail collectibles sold through international distributors.
Édith Piaf's song dates to 1945, written during the post-Liberation euphoria in Paris.