Oman Daily Observer

Nepal’s newly-retired ‘Kumari’ starts school

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KATHMANDU: Matina Shakya was only three when she was taken away from her parents to be worshipped as a “living goddess” in Nepal’s historic capital. On Monday she finally started school after puberty ended her nineyear reign.

Dressed in a green uniform and stripped of the heavy make-up she used to wear, Shakya, 12, looked like any other student as she walked into the Green Peace Co-ed School in Kathmandu.

Fellow students and teachers had gathered outside to welcome her, playing music and waving flags — a small reminder of the huge crowds she used to draw as Kathmandu’s Kumari, or living goddess. “We are excited to have her with us, and we are discussing how to ease her and help her adjust in the new environmen­t,” said the principal Pema Yonjan.

The Kumari is a pre-pubescent girl who lives in a temple palace in the heart of Kathmandu as part of a centurieso­ld tradition and is considered the embodiment of the Hindu goddess Taleju. She only leaves the temple 13 times a year on special feast days, when huge crowds of worshipper­s gather to see her.

That means the Kumaris cannot attend school, and most have struggled to reintegrat­e retire.

But Shakya received private tuition following a 2008 Supreme Court ruling that the living goddesses should be educated. Her father Pratap Man Shakya said she had attended nursery at the school and he was confident she would be able to adapt to her new life.

“We hope now that she is going to school in a good environmen­t she will become an even better student,” he said.

Shakya was anointed as the Kumari in 2008, leaving her home to be cared for by specially-appointed guardians, and only retired last month as she neared puberty.

The tradition of the Kumari, originatin­g from a word meaning princess in Sanskrit, comes from the Newar community indigenous to the Kathmandu Valley.

It blends elements of Hinduism and Buddhism and the most important Kumaris represent each of the three former royal kingdoms of the valley: Kathmandu, Patan and Bhaktapur. into society after they

 ?? — AFP ?? Matina Shakya walks to school with her father Pratap Man Shakya and sister Mijala Shakya for the first time in nearly a decade in Kathmandu on Monday.
— AFP Matina Shakya walks to school with her father Pratap Man Shakya and sister Mijala Shakya for the first time in nearly a decade in Kathmandu on Monday.

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