Luti Ajima Of Nepal: The Goddess Who Chose Dignity Over Gold In the sacred Kathmandu Valley, where the rivers Bagmati and Bishnumati carry the prayers of generations, there lives the story of a goddess who did not sit on a throne of power or ride a great vehicle of war. She walked on a road of hunger, humiliation, and heartbreak — and came out of it not bitter, but luminous. She is known as Luti Ajima, also called Indrayani, one of the Ashta Matrikas — the eight divine mother goddesses who are worshipped across the Kathmandu Valley in Nepal. She is among the eight daughters of Vatsala Maju. But unlike her sisters, she lived in poverty. And in that poverty, she discovered something her wealthier siblings never did — the unshakeable value of self-respect. The Feast That Broke Her Heart The story unfolds during the festival of Paha Charhe, when their mother called all eight daughters home for a feast. The seven sisters arrived and were received with warmth. They were seated well and...