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Woman Trust Chief Of Maharashtra Temple Won't Allow Other Women On Platform Reserved For Men

Woman Trust Chief Of Maharashtra Temple Won't Allow Other Women On Platform Reserved For Men
An elderly lady holds the henna-decorated hands of a married Hindu woman as they offer prayers with an oil lamp on the occasion of 'Vata Savitri Poornima' in Mumbai on June 12, 2014. On the occasion of Vata Savitri Purnima married Hindu women keep a fast for the long-life and good health of their husbands and break their fast by performing rituals beneath a banyan tree. The day's ritual involves worshipping a banyan (vata) tree by applying holy 'red kumkum' (vermillion) and turmeric and placing flowers and lighting incense sticks reverentially and culminates with the women circumambulating the tree seven times round, unwinding a spool of white thread in their hands as a priest recites mantras. AFP PHOTO/ INDRANIL MUKHERJEE (Photo credit should read INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/Getty Images)
INDRANIL MUKHERJEE via Getty Images
An elderly lady holds the henna-decorated hands of a married Hindu woman as they offer prayers with an oil lamp on the occasion of 'Vata Savitri Poornima' in Mumbai on June 12, 2014. On the occasion of Vata Savitri Purnima married Hindu women keep a fast for the long-life and good health of their husbands and break their fast by performing rituals beneath a banyan tree. The day's ritual involves worshipping a banyan (vata) tree by applying holy 'red kumkum' (vermillion) and turmeric and placing flowers and lighting incense sticks reverentially and culminates with the women circumambulating the tree seven times round, unwinding a spool of white thread in their hands as a priest recites mantras. AFP PHOTO/ INDRANIL MUKHERJEE (Photo credit should read INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/Getty Images)

MUMBAI -- A 40-year-old housewife Anita Shetye has been appointed as the first woman chairperson of Shani Shingnapur Temple Trust in Ahmednagar district, which was in the news recently for disallowing women from breaking the tradition of climbing up the temple platform to offer prayers.

Soon after her appointment, Shetye told reporters that she will continue to enforce that tradition and there was no plan to allow women on the 'chauthara' (temple platform).

Women devotees are not allowed to pour oil on the idol at this temple, dedicated to Shani, the personification of planet Saturn.

Shetye has become the first woman in the temple's over five-century-old history to don the mantle of temple trust chief and will get a five-year term. The other 11 trustees also include a woman, Vaishali Lande.

Shetye's appointment comes in the backdrop of four women from Pune deciding to galvanise a force of 400 and storm the temple premises to break the age-old tradition which prevents women from offering worship to Lord Shani from close quarters.

The Shani Shinganapur temple was in news last year when villagers allegedly performed a purification ritual at the temple after a woman devotee entered the prohibited area.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.