Kumari - The living Goddess by guest editor @srijana-gurung

in travelfeed •  5 years ago 

Hello superb people!


The word Kumari is derived from the Sanskrit Kaumarya, meaning "princess" - Wikipedia.

Introduction


Image Source

Kumari is a young girl worshipped as a living goddess in the Hindu religion for her energy and godly vibe. Also known to be the  the living reincarnation of the goddess Taleju. In Nepal, several Kumari is selected in different parts of Nepal but the most important Kumari is the Royal Kumari and she lives in Kumariu Ghar (Princes' house in Nepali) whereas the second most important Kumari is Kumari of Patan. The girl with no blemishes either from Shakya or Bajracharya family - "the caste of gold and silversmiths" is selected as Kumari. The tradition was started by Malla Dynasty in 17th Century.

Selection Process


Image Source 

To represent herself as a saint Kumari, she should pass through the selection process which is extremely strict and tough. She should pass the eligibility of her holiness with her fulfillment of "Battis lakshanas" which means 42 perfect Physical attributes. She should have never shed her blood, must have excellent health, not lost any of her teeth and so on. She is observed well and the selection process is quite strict as there should be no question raised.

Life of Royal Kumari


Image Source

After the selection, the Royal Kumari stays in the Kumari House -Basantapur. She is a completely a princess and won't feel any materialistic troubles as she lives Royal Life. She is taken by Kumarimi who takes care of all of her needs and guides and instruct her through the ceremonies. She leaves her palace rarely in the ceremonies and devotee worship her throughout. But the sad part is her family got to visit her rarely.

The rich cultural diversity and uniqueness behold our country Nepal and our Living goddess holds our cultural pride. If you are planning to visit Nepal in late August or early September you could experience the fun of INDRA JATRA as well as you can witness the living Goddess Kumari as her devotee for a blessing.

Help Us
Please help us build this community, @steem4nepal, to contribute toward realizing #steemit global potential. You can support us by upvoting, reesteeming, interacting through comments and yes, through donation and delegation.

If you would like to delegate to us you can use this Delegation Tool. Just put @steem4nepal in delegatee name and the amount you want to delegate. Or just support us in a steemit way as you wish.

All delegators will get upvote at least once a day.

Why join @steem4nepal?
Our aim is to bring Nepalese on #steemit together. So, if you are a Nepalese (living in Nepal or living abroad) please join us to support each other, to learn and share but most importantly to grow together as a kind, respectful and peace loving community on steemit. To grow kindly, respectfully, ethically and hopefully financially together.

We are just starting.....but we already have some good benefits, including some juicy upvotes for our members. Please check Discord Server. But together we can grow together providing wonderful benefits to each other.

How to become member of @steem4nepal

  1. SIMPLE - Join our Discord Server - CLICK HERE
  2. Follow us.
  3. Resteem this post if you can
    We would love to interact - so consider leaving a comment

So please join and support us - let's grow together.
@steem4nepal look forward to welcoming you with warm heart on the Discord Server.


(Thanks to @riverflows for this GIF)

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

Congratulations @steem4nepal! You have completed the following achievement on the Steem blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

You published more than 10 posts. Your next target is to reach 20 posts.
You received more than 10 as payout for your posts. Your next target is to reach a total payout of 50

You can view your badges on your Steem Board and compare to others on the Steem Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

To support your work, I also upvoted your post!

You can upvote this notification to help all Steem users. Learn how here!

Namaste fellow Mindful Life member. Thanks for the interesting article. Upvoted. I spent some months in India when training in Vaishnavism or Krishna Bhakti at the ashram, and I have heard a different translation of the word "kumari". Wikipedia may be wrong here because the word in Sanskrit "Kumara" is the masculine form to describe a small child, as in the name of Krishna - Nandakumara, which means small son of Nanda, the father of Krishna. The femimine equivalent is "kumari", where the a is replaced with an i at the end to denote feminine. So "kumari" means small girl, not "princess". Wikipedia cannot be trusted unfortunately.

Very interesting, thanks again.

Thank you. Yes, Kumar/Kumari, in general, are a boy/girl before marriage. But, in the context above in Nepal, Kumari is a goddess princess (as shown in the picture) who are revered and worshipped during their time :). There are quite famous big carnival type festivities to celebrate and worship these Kumaris in Nepal.

Great post!
!tip simple

Posted using Partiko iOS

🎁 Hi @steem4nepal! You have received 0.1 STEEM tip from @bewithbreath!

Sending tips with @tipU - how to guide :)