Tag Archives: Goddess

‘BJP Is ‘Anti-Women’, Hails Lord Ram But Silent On Goddess Sita’ Slams Mamata Banerjee | India Today – India Today

  1. ‘BJP Is ‘Anti-Women’, Hails Lord Ram But Silent On Goddess Sita’ Slams Mamata Banerjee | India Today India Today
  2. CM’s ‘anti-women, divisive’ barb at BJP at peace march Times of India
  3. “I am swearing on Allah if you assist the BJP, nobody will forgive you”: Mamata Banerjee makes Kafir jibe at ‘Sarv Dharm Sambhav’ rally OpIndia
  4. ‘Why No Holiday On Bose’s Anniversary’ Mamata Banerjee Slams BJP Over Ram Mandir Inauguration India Today
  5. Watch: To counter PM Modi, CM Mamata holds interfaith rally as Ayodhya Ram Temple inauguration was underway Times of India

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Priyanka Chopra poses like a ‘goddess’ with Zendaya in Rome, fans says she ‘looks like Cinderella’. See pics, videos – The Indian Express

  1. Priyanka Chopra poses like a ‘goddess’ with Zendaya in Rome, fans says she ‘looks like Cinderella’. See pics, videos The Indian Express
  2. Zendaya Narrowly Avoids Wardrobe Malfunction After Dress Gets ‘Lost in Transit’ PEOPLE
  3. Zendaya’s Fashion Emergency Has Stylist Law Roach Coming in Clutch | E! News E! News
  4. Priyanka Chopra dazzles in white dress, rocks two ponytails at new photoshoot in Rome: Pics and videos in Indiatimes.com
  5. Priyanka, Zendaya laugh as they pose like soul sisters at hotel launch in Rome Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Ukraine’s “Hinduphobic” Cartoon on Goddess Kali Triggers Outrage | Vantage with Palki Sharma – Firstpost

  1. Ukraine’s “Hinduphobic” Cartoon on Goddess Kali Triggers Outrage | Vantage with Palki Sharma Firstpost
  2. Russia comes out in support of Hindus; Lashes ‘Nazi’ Ukraine for mocking Goddess Kali | Details Hindustan Times
  3. Image of Indian goddess Kali posing like Marilyn Monroe leads to MFA apology to India Yahoo News
  4. ‘We respect unique Indian culture’: Ukraine apologises for ‘Kali’ tweet The Indian Express
  5. Goddess Kali Insult: Ukraine ‘regrets’ after stoking row | ‘Respect Unique Indian Culture’ Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Ukraine apologises for Goddess Kali cartoon; govt removes Defence Ministry’s controversial tweet – The Tribune India

  1. Ukraine apologises for Goddess Kali cartoon; govt removes Defence Ministry’s controversial tweet The Tribune India
  2. “We Regret”: Ukraine Apologises After Backlash Over Goddess Kali Tweet NDTV
  3. Gravitas: Indians call out Ukraine for its tweet | Meme hurt religious sentiments of Indians WION
  4. Goddess Kali meme: Ukraine defence ministry’s outrageous tweet proves its ‘cool’ to denigrate gods and beliefs of Hindus Firstpost
  5. Image of Indian goddess Kali posing like Marilyn Monroe leads to MFA apology to India Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The women who lived as sex slaves to an Indian goddess

Dedicated to an Indian goddess as a child, Huvakka Bhimappa’s years of sexual servitude began when her uncle took her virginity, raping her in exchange for a saree and some jewellery.

Bhimappa was not yet 10 years old when she became a “devadasi” — girls coerced by their parents into an elaborate wedding ritual with a Hindu deity, many of whom are then forced into illegal prostitution.

Devadasis are expected to live a life of religious devotion, forbidden from marrying other mortals, and forced at puberty to sacrifice their virginity to an older man, in return for money or gifts.

“In my case, it was my mother’s brother,” Bhimappa, now in her late 40s, told AFP.

What followed was years of sexual slavery, earning money for her family through encounters with other men in the name of serving the goddess.

Bhimappa eventually escaped her servitude but with no education, she earns around a dollar a day toiling in fields.

Her time as a devotee to the Hindu goddess Yellamma has also rendered her an outcast in the eyes of her community.

She had loved a man once, but it would have been unthinkable for her to ask him to marry.

“If I was not a devadasi, I would have had a family and children and some money. I would have lived well,” she said.

Devadasis have been an integral part of southern Indian culture for centuries and once enjoyed a respectable place in society.

Many were highly educated, trained in classical dance and music, lived comfortable lives and chose their own sexual partners.

“This notion of more or less religiously sanctioned sexual slavery was not part of the original system of patronage,” historian Gayathri Iyer told AFP.

Iyer said that in the 19th century, during the British colonial era, the divine pact between devadasi and goddess evolved into an institution of sexual exploitation.

It now serves as a means for poverty-stricken families from the bottom of India’s rigid caste hierarchy to relieve themselves of responsibility for their daughters.

The practice was outlawed in Bhimappa’s home state of Karnataka back in 1982, and India’s top court has described the devotion of young girls to temples as an “evil”.

Campaigners, however, say that young girls are still secretly inducted into devadasi orders.

Four decades after the state ban, there are still more than 70,000 devadasis in Karnataka, India’s human rights commission wrote last year.

– ‘I was alone’ –

Girls are commonly seen as burdensome and costly in India due to the tradition of wedding dowries.

By forcing daughters to become devadasis, poorer families gain a source of income and avoid the costs of marrying them off.

Many households around the small southern town of Saundatti — home to a revered Yellamma temple — believe that having a family member in the order can lift their fortunes or cure the illness of a loved one.

It was at this temple that Sitavva D. Jodatti was enjoined to marry the goddess when she was eight years old.

Her sisters had all married other men, and her parents decided to dedicate her to Yellamma in order to provide for them.

“When other people get married, there is a bride and a groom. When I realised I was alone, I started crying,” Jodatti, 49, told AFP.

Her father eventually fell ill, and she was pulled out of school to engage in sex work and help pay for his treatment.

“By the age of 17, I had two kids,” she said.

Rekha Bhandari, a fellow former devadasi, said they had been subjected to a practice of “blind tradition” that had ruined their lives.

She was forced into the order after the death of her mother and was 13 when a 30-year-old man took her virginity. She fell pregnant soon after.

“A normal delivery was difficult. The doctor yelled at my family, saying that I was too young to give birth,” the 45-year-old told AFP.

“I had no understanding.”

– ‘Many women have died’ –

Years of unsafe sex exposed many devadasis to sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.

“I know of women who are infected and now it has passed on to their children,” an activist who works with devadasis, who asked not to be named, told AFP.

“They hide it and live with it in secrecy. Many women have died.”

Parents are occasionally prosecuted for allowing their daughters to be inducted as devadasis, and women who leave the order are given meagre government pensions of 1,500 rupees ($18) per month.

Nitesh Patil, a civil servant who administers Saundatti, told AFP that there had been no “recent instances” of women being dedicated to temples.

India’s rights commission last year ordered Karnataka and several other Indian states to outline what they were doing to prevent the practice, after a media investigation found that devadasi inductions were still widespread.

The stigma around their pasts means women who leave their devadasi order often endure lives as outcasts or objects of ridicule, and few ever marry.

Many find themselves destitute or struggling to survive on poorly paid manual labour and farming work.

Jodatti now heads a civil society group which helped extricate the women AFP spoke to from their lives of servitude and provides support to former devadasis.

She said many of her contemporaries had several years ago become engrossed by the #MeToo movement and the personal revelations of celebrity women around the world that revealed them as survivors of sexual abuse.

“We watch the news and sometimes when we see famous people… we understand their situation is much like ours. They have suffered the same. But they continue to live freely,” she said.

“We have gone through the same experience, but we don’t get the respect they get.

“Devadasi women are still looked down upon.”

ash/gle/mca/aha/dhc

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Fans Are ‘Stunned’ By Kaley Cuoco’s New Dark Hair Transformation: ‘Goddess’

Kaley Cuoco just traded her signature blonde tresses for a darker color, and fans can’t get enough of her new look!

The Flight Attendant actress, 37, debuted her brand new hair at the 80th annual Golden Globes, and also showed off her growing baby bump in a flowy lilac gown.

READ MORE: We Still Haven’t Recovered From The Pink Tulle Gown Kaley Cuoco Wore On The Red Carpet—Simply Stunning!

 

Kaley Cuoco Debuts Brunette Hair Color At The 2023 Golden Globes

At the event, the Big Bang Theory alum wore her newly brunette locks in an exquisite updo with her wispy bangs styled down and loose strands elegantly framing her face. As for makeup, Cuoco added subtle light purple eyeshadow and black eyeliner to emphasize her green eyes, along with mascara, rosy blush and a pink lipstick hue to top it all off.

The Meet Cute star’s draping lavender dress was from Vera Wang, and featured thin, embellished straps with bows, a square neckline and floor-length, stunning fabric. As she graced the red carpet, Cuoco posed for solo photos and later joined her boyfriend and father-to-be Tom Pelphrey.

 

 

Pelphrey donned an all-white look, wearing a white blazer, button-up shirt and black bow tie. Back in October 2022, the couple announced that they are expecting a baby girl.

 

Fan Reactions To Cuoco’s New Hair

Cuoco shared photos of her Golden Globes frock and new hair with her 7.6 million Instagram followers, and they left comments of approval under her upload. “What a nice color for you Kaley. Congratulations on your soon to be new addition” one fan wrote as another added, “this hair color is so pretty on you wow!!”

Someone else dubbed Cuoco a “goddess” and one other user noted that both “brunette” and “purple” are her colors. (We concur!)

 

 

As Cuoco shared several romantic photos of her and Pelphrey, fans also deemed them to be the “cutest couple,” “the most beautiful parents” and a “well-dressed duo.” (We couldn’t agree more)

 

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‘Kaali’: Filmmaker Leena Manimekalai faces death threats over controversial Hindu goddess poster

Written by Oscar Holland, CNN

A Toronto-based filmmaker says she has received a deluge of death threats and abuse from Hindu nationalists in India after she depicted the goddess Kali smoking a cigarette.

The image, which featured on a poster for her independent film “Kaali”, has sparked nationwide debate in India, with politicians, diplomats and local police reportedly among those accusing director Leena Manimekalai of offending religious sentiments.

The film, which uses an alternative English spelling of the goddesses’ name, was among 18 works intended to explore multiculturalism at the Toronto Metropolitan University’s “Under the Tent” showcase at the Aga Khan Museum.

Described as a “performance documentary,” it imagines the Hindu goddess “descending onto a queer female filmmaker” and viewing Canada — and its diverse people — through her eyes, Manimekalai explained.

“She is a free spirit. She spits at patriarchy. She dismantles Hindutva (an ideology that seeks to transform secular India into a Hindu nation). She destroys capitalism. She embraces everyone with a thousand hands.”

Kali “chooses love” and accepts a cigarette from “working-class street dwellers,” Manimekalai added in an email.

A promotional poster, which features the director dressed as Kali, shows the Hindu goddess smoking and holding aloft a rainbow flag, a symbol of the LGBTQ community.

Manimekalai, who is from the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu and is currently a graduate fellow at Toronto’s York University, shared the poster to Twitter on Saturday. It soon went viral, eliciting furious responses from some Indian social media users — many of whom called for her arrest. Within days, tens of thousands of tweets had appeared with the hashtag #ArrestLeenaManimekalai.

In a statement published Monday, the Indian High Commission in Canada’s capital, Ottawa, urged the country’s authorities to “take action” against what it called a “disrespectful depiction.” The Aga Khan Museum — having screened an excerpt of the film over the weekend — then announced that Manimekalai’s work was “no longer being shown.”
“The Museum deeply regrets that one of the 18 short videos from ‘Under the Tent’ and its accompanying social media post have inadvertently caused offense to members of the Hindu and other faith communities,” the museum said in a statement Tuesday.
Toronto Metropolitan University also distanced itself from the film, expressing “regret” at having “caused offense”.

In a statement, the school added: “We are committed to equity, diversity and inclusion while at the same time respecting the diversity of beliefs and points of view in our society.”

Manimekalai expressed her disappointment with the two institutions, accusing them of having “traded off academic freedom and artistic freedom to save their skin.”

“It is sad to see these institutions operating in a sovereign country like Canada bowing down to the international enforcement of Hindutva’s totalizing narrative and relentless quashing of free expression.”

The controversy played through the week on TV debates, where critics argued that Manimekalai’s portrayal had disparaged a sacred figure. Parliamentarians in India have also weighed in, with Vinit Goenka, a spokesperson for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) calling the image an “insult to all Indians.” Indian-born Canadian politician Chandra Arya also expressed concern, writing on Twitter that seeing the poster had been “painful.”
Police in both Delhi and the state of Uttar Pradesh have filed formal complaints against the director, according to CNN affiliate CNN-News18, though Manimekalai said she has not been served any official notices.

Torrent of abuse

The director blames the angry online response on what she called a “mercenary troll army” of BJP supporters and right-wing nationalists. She said that members of her film crew have been doxed, while family and friends have also received online abuse.

Manimekalai claims that she has been subjected to “hatemongering” from thousands of social media accounts. Dozens of screenshots, shared with CNN by the director, appear to show threats of violence, including direct death threats.

In Uttar Pradesh state, Hindu religious leader Mahant Raju Das published a video in which he threatens the filmmaker with beheading. The Times of India meanwhile reported Thursday that police in Tamil Nadu had arrested a woman over another video containing threats against the director.
The controversy is one of a growing number of instances in which depictions of Hindu gods have attracted accusations of religious insensitivity — from Nestlé withdrawing KitKat chocolate bars wrappers featuring various deities to Rihanna facing backlash for posing topless with a pendant of the god Ganesha.

Kali, the Hindu goddess of death, time and doomsday, is worshipped throughout India. The wife of Shiva, she is often portrayed as blue or black, with a long tongue and multiple arms.

Giant statue of the Hindu Goddess Kail at a Hindu temple in Kadaloor, Tamil Nadu, India. Credit: Creative Touch Imaging Ltd./NurPhoto/Getty Images

Manimekalai maintains that her depiction of the goddess is consistent with her own religious interpretation.

“In rural Tamil Nadu, the state I come from… she eats meat cooked in goat’s blood, drinks (the alcoholic beverage) arrack, smokes beedi and dances wild(ly),” she said, adding that this is the version of Kali that “I grew up with and … have embodied in the film.”

Manimekalai plans to complete a director’s cut of “Kaali”, with a view to screening it at a film festival.

“I will continue to make art,” she said.

Top image caption: A photo of the filmmaker.



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Megan Fox wears Alexander Wang to the grocery store: ‘GODDESS’

Megan Fox even makes running errands look good.

On Monday, the 35-year-old actress shared photos of the outfit she wore to get groceries — and it’s certainly not your typical errands running look. Rather, the mom of three rocked a neon green bodysuit with a cutout that showed off her torso. She paired the one-piece with jeans bleached with a pebble pattern and a matching jacket. 

“This is how I go to Erewhon now. Let’s talk about it,” she captioned the Instagram post. 

And talk about it they did. 

“SHE ATE THAT,” a fan wrote.

“I AM IN LOVE WITH EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS LOOK,” someone said.

“GODDESS,” another person added.

“How does it feel to be the hottest human on planet,” a commenter wondered.

Fox, who is dating Machine Gun Kelly, has been putting lots of bold looks on display lately. Working with stylist Maeve Reilly, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles star has taken on some sartorial risks with cutouts, color and more. 

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Stunning Martian City Concept Is Named After Chinese Goddess

We all know Elon Musk’s ideas for the colonization of the planet. Unlike the plans of NASA and other organizations, who are taking things slow, Musk is already dreaming about Martian cities, and himself moving there at one point.

So having what may very well be the very first Martian city concept laid down before our eyes comes as no surprise. What is surprising is that it doesn’t come from Musk, but from an architectural firm called ABIBOO.

The city they dreamed up is called Nuwa. That’s the name of the mother goddess in Chinese mythology, the one responsible for the creation of humans.

The site chosen for this place is something called Tempe Mensa. We were unable to find details on where exactly that is, but for the record that could be anywhere, because mensa in planetary geology stands for a flat-topped prominence with cliff-like edges – and there are plenty of those on Mars.

Why cliff-like edges? Because Nuwa is to be built inside the rocks, as a means to protect it from radiation, meteorites, and the direct light of the Sun.

As with any city, this one too would have residential and work areas (called macro-buildings), natural spaces nicknamed Green Domes, and even agricultural areas.

In theory, Nuwa should be capable of supporting a population of around 250,000 people, but it may not be the only human dwelling on the planet. ABIBOO envisions a network of five human settlements that include Abalos City at the North Pole, and Marineris City in Valles Marineris, “the most extensive canyon of the solar system” as the architecture firm says.

These Mars cities are not, at least in the beginning, envisioned as independent colonies, but still reliant on Earth. A regular shuttle service should connect the two planets, and a ticket on one of those should cost $300K.

That covers “a one-way trip, one residential unit of ~25-35 m2/person, full access to common facilities, all life support services & food, and a binding work contract to devote between 60% and 80% of their work time to tasks assigned by the city.”

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