Meet Nepal’s Youngest Goddess Aryatara Shakya, Just 2 Years And 8 Months Old, Crowned As The Kumari Amidst Dashain Celebrations In Kathmandu
Kathmandu has a brand-new goddess — and she’s not even three years old. In the midst of Nepal’s biggest festival season, where Instagram is buzzing with photos of colourful Dashain swings and families
dressed in their festive best, the Himalayan nation has turned the spotlight on two-year-and-eight-month-old Aryatara Shakya, the newly anointed Kumari or “living goddess”. Yes, you read that right — Nepal’s youngest celebrity right now can’t even tie her own shoelaces. On Tuesday, little Aryatara was carried by her family from their home in a narrow Kathmandu alley to the centuries-old Kumari Ghar (temple palace). Crowds thronged the streets, hoping for a glimpse. Some pressed flowers into her tiny hands, others bowed to touch her feet with their foreheads — the highest form of reverence in Nepalese tradition. In a nation where both Hindus and Buddhists worship the Kumari, her arrival marks a moment as spiritual as it is social.
A Goddess in Red
Chosen at just under three years of age, Aryatara meets the exacting criteria that the role demands — unblemished skin, perfect teeth, eyes like a goddess, and yes, absolutely no fear of the dark. She will now don the symbolic crimson attire, wear her hair in a tight topknot, and carry the iconic third eye painted on her forehead. The new Kumari will bless devotees, including Nepal’s president, during upcoming rituals this week.For context, Kumaris are selected from the Newar Shakya clan, a community indigenous to the Kathmandu Valley. Families take immense pride in having a daughter chosen — a role that elevates their position within society and history. But for the girl herself, it’s a life both extraordinary and confined. Kumaris live mostly indoors, stepping outside only for major festivals when they’re paraded on a chariot through Kathmandu’s streets. Playmates? Just a few carefully selected ones. School? Until recently, lessons came only from private tutors within temple walls — though now, the goddess has access to TV and books too.
Dashain Meets Destiny
The announcement came on the eighth day of Dashain, the longest Hindu festival in Nepal that celebrates the victory of good over evil. With schools and offices shut, the city erupted in celebration. Imagine: while most children Aryatara’s age were clutching kites or nibbling sweets, she was being enthroned as a goddess. It’s a cultural moment that blends the mystical with the everyday — and one that makes Nepal stand out in global headlines during a season when the world is also gearing up for Diwali lights.
Yesterday a Daughter, Today a Deity
“She was just my daughter yesterday, but today she is a goddess,” said her father, Ananta Shakya, beaming with both pride and disbelief. He adds that signs of her destiny came even before birth. “During pregnancy, my wife dreamt she was carrying a goddess. We knew she was special.”Meanwhile, the outgoing Kumari, 11-year-old Trishna Shakya, quietly departed on a palanquin from a side entrance, ending her divine chapter after nearly eight years. According to tradition, a Kumari reverts to mortal life once she reaches puberty — an extraordinary transition from living goddess to everyday girl.
The Modern Kumari
Being a Kumari is not without challenges. Former child goddesses often struggle to adjust to “normal” life — schools, chores, and friendships. Nepalese folklore even suggests that men who marry a former Kumari could die young, which adds to the complexities of their future. Yet, modern reforms are slowly softening this journey. Retired Kumaris now receive a monthly pension of about $110, and opportunities for education during their divine tenure are expanding. So, while Aryatara Shakya may now be worshipped by thousands, her story is also one of balancing age-old tradition with a society that is cautiously modernising its cultural icons.
A Goddess for a New Era
Nepal’s living goddess tradition has fascinated travellers, anthropologists, and spiritual seekers for centuries. But in 2025, with social media buzzing and global interest in cultural rituals sharper than ever, the coronation of a toddler goddess feels both timeless and perfectly in tune with today’s world. Aryatara may only be two, but she now carries centuries of tradition on her tiny shoulders. And in Kathmandu, amid the festive chaos of Dashain, the city has found its newest divine child — a little girl whose gaze is said to hold the blessings of the gods themselves.