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

in #travelfeed5 years ago

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.

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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.