Custodians of Knowledge: The Pustaka as a Divine Emblem in Hindu Sacred Art In the iconographic vocabulary of Hindu sacred art, the Pustaka is far more than a book. It is a condensed statement of a deity's or sage's relationship with transcendent knowledge — a visual declaration that the figure who holds it is a custodian, transmitter, or embodiment of sacred learning. The word itself derives from the Sanskrit root meaning to write or manuscript, and it denotes a bound text or stack of palm-leaf folios, the classical format in which ancient Indian learning was preserved and passed on. The Pustaka is classified in the Agamic and Puranic traditions as an emblematic lakshana — a recognition mark — rather than an ayudha or weapon. It does not strike, protect, or destroy. It enlightens. This distinction is crucial, for it tells us that wherever the Pustaka appears, the iconographic context is one of instruction, transmission, and the primacy of knowing over doing. The Deities Wh...