Department of Posts Releases Set of 8 Commemorative Postage Stamps on ‘Puppets of India’, Celebrating India’s Puppetry Tradition, Handcrafted Stories Carried Through Generations
1. At a Glance
- Set of 8 commemorative postage stamps issued by the Department of Posts, Ministry of Communications, spotlighting India's regional puppetry traditions [S1].
- Each stamp depicts a distinct traditional puppet form from a different state, framing puppetry as living intangible cultural heritage [S1][S2].
- UPSC relevance: GS-I (Art & Culture — performing arts, folk traditions) and Prelims (matching puppet form ↔ state/region).
2. Why in the News
- Released on 13 February 2026 at the Indian Habitat Centre, New Delhi, by Ms. Vandita Kaul, Secretary (Posts) [S1][S2].
- Marks a continuation of India Post's "miniature ambassadors of heritage" series celebrating intangible cultural heritage [S1].
3. Background & Evolution
- Puppetry in India dates to references in Tamil classics (Silappadikaram) and Sanskrit drama (the term Sutradhara — "string-holder" — derives from puppet theatre tradition).
- Indian puppetry classified broadly into string (marionette), shadow, rod, and glove forms; each region evolved distinct styles tied to local epics (Ramayana/Mahabharata).
- India Post has periodically commemorated Indian art forms via stamps (e.g., Ramayana 2017, classical dance series); the Puppets of India set extends this tradition [S1].
4. Core Static Facts
Issuing body: Department of Posts, Ministry of Communications [S1]. Date / Venue: 13 Feb 2026, Indian Habitat Centre, New Delhi [S1]. Designer: Shri Sankha Samanta (stamps, First Day Cover, Brochure, Miniature Sheet, Sheetlets, Special Cancellation) [S2].
The 8 puppet forms & their states [S1][S2]:
| # | Puppet Form | State | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kathputli | Rajasthan | String/marionette |
| 2 | Yakshagana Sutrada Gombeyatta | Karnataka | String (based on Yakshagana theatre) |
| 3 | Daanger Putul | West Bengal | Rod puppet |
| 4 | Kathi Kundhei | Odisha | Rod puppet |
| 5 | Benir Putul | West Bengal | Glove puppet |
| 6 | Pavakathakali | Kerala | Glove (mimics Kathakali) |
| 7 | Ravanachhaya | Odisha | Shadow puppet (deer-skin) |
| 8 | Tolu Bommalatta | Andhra Pradesh | Shadow puppet (leather) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Cultural / Historical - Reinforces puppetry as intangible cultural heritage transmitted intergenerationally; aligns with UNESCO 2003 Convention spirit (India ratified 2005). - Ravanachhaya (Odisha) is one of the oldest shadow puppet traditions, using opaque deer-skin (no colour, only silhouettes) — contrasts with translucent coloured Tolu Bommalatta.
Social / Livelihood - Puppeteer communities (e.g., Bhat community of Nagaur, Rajasthan for Kathputli) face declining patronage; commemorative recognition aids visibility and livelihood of folk artists. - Many traditions sustained by hereditary families; stamps spotlight artisan economy.
Administrative / Institutional - Promoted by Sangeet Natak Akademi (autonomous body under Ministry of Culture) which recognises puppetry as one of four performing-art categories alongside music, dance, drama. - India Post leverages philately as soft-power cultural diplomacy [S1].
Federal Spread - 8 stamps cover 6 states across North, East, South, West India — symbolic federal-cultural inclusivity (Odisha and West Bengal each get two forms).
6. Recent Developments
- 13 Feb 2026 — Stamp set released, New Delhi [S1].
- Released by Secretary (Posts) Vandita Kaul in presence of cultural fraternity members [S1].
- Designed by Sankha Samanta with accompanying Miniature Sheet, Sheetlets, FDC, Brochure and Special Cancellation [S2].
7. Prelims Hooks
- Ministry: Communications (Department of Posts), NOT Ministry of Culture [S1].
- Number of stamps in the set: 8 [S1].
- Release date: 13 February 2026, Indian Habitat Centre, New Delhi [S1].
- Ravanachhaya — shadow puppet form of Odisha [S1].
- Tolu Bommalatta — leather shadow puppets of Andhra Pradesh [S1].
- Pavakathakali — glove puppet of Kerala mimicking Kathakali dance-drama [S1].
- Kathputli — string marionette of Rajasthan [S1].
- Yakshagana Sutrada Gombeyatta — string puppetry of Karnataka [S1].
- Daanger Putul and Benir Putul — both from West Bengal (rod and glove respectively) [S1][S2].
- Kathi Kundhei — rod puppets of Odisha [S1].
- Stamps designed by Sankha Samanta [S2].
- Released by Vandita Kaul, Secretary (Posts) [S1].
- The four classical Indian puppet categories: string, shadow, rod, glove.
8. Mains Relevance
- GS-I — Indian Heritage and Culture: "Salient aspects of Art Forms… from ancient to modern times."
- Possible question stems: 1. "Indian puppetry is a microcosm of regional cultural diversity." Discuss with examples of shadow, string, rod and glove traditions. 2. Examine the role of state institutions (Sangeet Natak Akademi, India Post) in preserving India's folk performing arts. 3. How do intangible cultural heritage forms like puppetry contribute to livelihoods of traditional artisan communities? Suggest policy measures.
9. Related Topics to Study Next
- Sangeet Natak Akademi — apex body for performing arts.
- UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list — India's 15 inscribed elements (Kutiyattam, Ramlila, etc.).
- Folk theatre forms — Yakshagana, Therukoothu, Jatra, Nautanki, Bhavai.
- Classical dance forms (Sangeet Natak Akademi recognises 8) — common comparison area.
- One District One Product (ODOP) — Kathputli linked to Rajasthan craft clusters.
- GI tags for handicrafts — many puppet-making clusters seek GI protection.
- Philately as cultural diplomacy — past India Post commemorative issues.
- Tribal/folk art schemes — Ministry of Culture's Scheme for Safeguarding Intangible Heritage.
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing Ravanachhaya (Odisha, shadow) with Tolu Bommalatta (Andhra, shadow) — both shadow, different states; Ravanachhaya uses opaque deer-skin (no colour).
- Assigning Puppets of India stamps to Ministry of Culture — actually Ministry of Communications / Dept of Posts [S1].
- Mixing Pavakathakali (Kerala glove) with Kathakali (Kerala classical dance) — Pavakathakali is the puppet derivative.
- West Bengal contributes two distinct forms (Daanger Putul + Benir Putul); easy to miss.
- Kathputli is from Rajasthan, NOT Gujarat (a frequent confusion with Bhavai).
11. Sources
- [S1] Department of Posts Releases Set of 8 Commemorative Postage Stamps on 'Puppets of India' — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2227936 — (tier: 1)
- [S2] Press Information Bureau — Puppets of India stamp release (English mirror) — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2227936®=3&lang=2 — (tier: 1)