Wrapped in red silk and adorned with red flowers in her hair, Matani Shakya received approval from the priests and President Ram Baran Yadav in a centuries-old tradition with deep ties to Nepal's monarchy, which was abolished in May.
The  new "kumari" or living goddess, was carried from her parents' home to  an ancient palatial temple in the heart of the Nepali capital, Katmandu,  where she will live until she reaches puberty and loses her divine  status.
She will be worshipped by Hindus and Buddhists as an incarnation of the powerful Hindu deity Taleju.A panel of judges conducted a series of ancient ceremonies to select the goddess from several 2- to 4-year-old girls who are all members of the impoverished Shakya goldsmith caste.
The  judges read the candidates' horoscopes and check each one for physical  imperfections. The living goddess must have perfect hair, eyes, teeth  and skin with no scars, and should not be afraid of the dark.
As  a final test, the living goddess must spend a night alone in a room  among the heads of ritually slaughtered goats and buffaloes without  showing fear.
Having  passed all the tests, the child will stay in almost complete isolation  at the temple, and will be allowed to return to her family only at the  onset of menstruation when a new goddess will be named to replace her.
"I feel a bit sad, but since my child has become a living goddess I feel proud," said her father Pratap Man Shakya.During her time as a goddess, she will always wear red, pin up her hair in topknots, and have a "third eye" painted on her forehead.
Devotees  touch the girls' feet with their foreheads, the highest sign of respect  among Hindus in Nepal. During religious festivals the goddesses are  wheeled around on a chariot pulled by devotees.
Critics  say the tradition violates both international and Nepalese laws on  child rights. The girls often struggle to readjust to normal lives after  they return home.
Nepalese  folklore holds that men who marry a former kumari will die young, and  so many girls remain unmarried and face a life of hardship.Source: news.yahoo.com
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