Girl with two faces valued as 'goddess'

*SAINI SUNPURA, India: A baby with two faces was born in a northern Indian
village, where she is doing well and is being worshipped as the
reincarnation of a Hindu goddess.*

The one-month-old girl, Lali, apparently has an extremely rare condition
known as craniofacial duplication, where a single head has two faces.

All of Lali's facial features are duplicated except for her ears -- she has
two. Otherwise, she has two noses, two pairs of lips and two pairs of eyes.

"My daughter is fine -- like any other child," Vinod Singh, 23, a farm
worker, said last night.

Lali's mother, Sushma, wasn't so sure when the girl was born last month.

"When I saw my daughter for the first time, I was afraid of her but when the
doctor said that aside from her two faces she was a normal child, I accepted
her, " Sushma told the Indian News Service.

Lali, born into a Dalit or untouchable family, has caused a sensation in the
dusty village of Saini Sunpura, 40km east of New Delhi.

When she left the hospital, eight hours after a normal delivery on March 11,
she was swarmed by villagers, Sabir Ali, the director of Saifi Hospital,
said.

"She drinks milk from her two mouths and opens and shuts all the four eyes
at one time," Dr Ali said.

Rural India is deeply superstitious and the little girl is being hailed as a
return of the Hindu goddess of valour, Durga, a fiery deity traditionally
depicted with three eyes and many arms.

Up to 100 people have been visiting Lali at her home every day to touch her
feet out of respect, offer money and receive blessings, Mr Singh said.

"She is the reincarnation of a goddess," said Lakhi Chand, a 65-year-old
farmer who came to see Lali from neighbouring Haryana state.

"Lali is God's gift to us," said Jaipal Singh, a member of the local village
council.

"She has brought fame to our village."

Village chief Daulat Ram said he planned to build a temple to Durga in the
village.

"I am writing to the state Government to provide money to build the temple
and help the parents look after their daughter," Mr Ram said.

Lali's condition is often linked to serious health complications, but the
doctor said she was doing well.

"She is leading a normal life with no breathing difficulties," said Dr Ali,
adding that he saw no need for surgery.

Lali's parents were married in February last year. Lali is their first
child.

Mr Singh said he took his daughter to a hospital in New Delhi where doctors
suggested a CT scan to determine if her internal organs were normal, but he
felt it was unnecessary.

"I don't feel the need of that at this stage as my daughter is behaving like
a normal child, posing no problems," he said.

AP


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"It's never too late to become the person you were meant to be."

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