Chapter 2: I’m Mortal, Again
Life After Being A Goddess
"What I liked most was to make people happy", says an 11-year-old Unika Bajracharya in her new room in Patan, Kathmandu. After having been the Living Goddess of Nepal for more than 5 years, she was replaced the day she had her first period, in February 2018.
During the past 300 years, a succession of small girls have been chosen to become a Nepal's living Goddess, worshiped for both Hindus and Buddhists. There are a total of 10 living Goddesses, but the most important ones are the Kumari of Kathmandu and of Patan, both in the Kathmandu Valley. Chosen from the 3 to 6 years of age from the Newari ethnic group, they are confined inside a temple. Their relatives and a private teacher are the only ones who can talk to them and they are not allowed to touch the ground with their feet. They both must observe strict rules of purity and segregation, and the practice has come under criticism from human rights activists. They are believed to be the personification of the Goddess Taleju or Devi and to hold a connection with the divine.
This Goddess life doesn’t last forever. In the Nepalese culture, menstrual blood is seen as something polluted, and non-divine. Even for a Goddess, menstruation means a change of life. Once a Kumari has her first period, she has to be replaced. "It takes at least one year to be used to it", says Samita Bajracharya, a 16-year-old former Kumari. After her first period, Bajracharya was replaced and had to adjust to a new "mortal life".
"You are a Goddess, and from one day to another, you're just a normal person learning how to take the bus". Simple things like going to school can seem overwhelming at first. For the first time in their lives, they will have to mingle with other kids and learn to live like the humans they once were.