Teenage Nepalese girls from Sindhuli, 130 kilometres
southeast from Kathmandu, took pictures to document the restrictions
imposed upon them during their periods as part of a campaign by charity
WaterAid, challenging taboos and improving female sanitation.
Every month in Nepal, the girls are separated from their
families, forbidden from looking at the sun, touching fruit and flowers
and even staying in their own homes. In Nepal girls during their
periods are considered to be ‘impure’ or ‘contaminated’.
The tradition is called Chhaupadi, popular in
western-nepalese hindu communities, it is common for girls to remain
excluded from interaction with the family for up to 6-10 days,
childbirth can also result in a 10 day exclusion.
It comes from a superstition of impurity, with the logic
that if women touches things it will pass on that impurity and provide
bad-luck or illness. Women are barred from consuming meat, dairy, fruit
and vegetables through the fear that their menstruation will ruin the
produce.
Instead they are forced to live off rice, salt and dry
foods. This is an imputation that can be detrimental to girls
education, mental/physical health and role in the community. Chhaupadi was outlawed by the Supreme Court of Nepal in 2005, however it is still commonplace in rural communities.
Manisha, 14, who took part in the project explained the
limitations put on her during her when she began her first period: “I
stayed at someone else’s house during my first period. I wasn’t allowed
to go to school and, on top of that, I wasn’t allowed to even read a
book. It was a wrong belief that we shouldn’t study during
menstruation”
The girls, who had never used a camera before, were given
the opportunity to exhibit their work in the community, to their friends
and family in order to facilitate discussion around menstrual taboos.
Giving girls a voice in a country where 58% of women are illiterate.
Barbara Frost, WaterAid’s chief executive shared the
charities motivations to conduct the project: “The silence and stigma
that surround menstruation impinges on girls’ everyday lives.
Furthermore, when there are no safe, private toilets in schools, girls
often skip school during their period, or drop out of school altogether
once they reach adolescence. With nowhere hygienic to clean sanitary
pads or wash, women and girls also risk infection”
“Being able to deal with periods in a hygienic and dignified
way is crucial to women’s wellbeing. It helps women feel that they are
able to play a full role in society, no matter what time of the month."
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