KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) – Trishna Shakya, 8, looks imposing in her finery as she is carried high in the arms of a helper from the temple palace. As she rides a chariot bedecked in garlands of brilliant orange marigolds, a crowd of devotees lifts their phones to capture the moment while receiving her blessings.
See Nepal’s living goddess leave her palace to bless throngs of worshipers
KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) – Trishna Shakya, 8, looks imposing in her finery as she is carried high in the arms of a helper from the temple palace. As she rides a chariot bedecked in garlands of brilliant orange marigolds, a crowd of devotees lifts their phones to capture the moment while receiving her blessings.
Shakya has been serving as Kumari – Nepal’s living goddess – since the age of 3, living in the Kumari’s temple palace for the past five years.
With thick vermillion paste on her forehead surrounding a golden representation of her “third eye,” Kumari was driven around the center of the capital in a wooden chariot pulled by devotees through tens of thousands gathered for the start of Nepal’s Indra Jatra festival Saturday.
The word “kumari” means virgin in the Nepali language, and its occupants are selected at a very young age, sometimes as young as 2. They spend years in the palace temple, serving in the role until just before puberty.