Ajima Dhyo and the Living Shakta Tradition of Nepal Long before temples were built of brick and stone, the Newar people of the Kathmandu Valley recognized a power older than language itself — the fierce, protective energy of the divine feminine. This energy took form in the tradition of Ajima Dhyo, a category of goddess-guardians whose presence is woven into the streets, courtyards, crossroads, and sacred boundaries of every Newar settlement. The word Ajima translates to "mother of grandmother," yet this linguistic meaning barely scratches the surface of what these deities represent. They are not ancestral figures in a sentimental sense. They are primordial manifestations of Shakti, the supreme creative and protective force that sustains all existence. In Shakta philosophy, the universe is not governed by an impersonal force but by the dynamic energy of the Divine Mother. The Devi Mahatmya, one of the most sacred texts of the Shakta tradition, declares that it is the Goddess ...