jeudi 3 décembre 2015

'We bleed. Accept it and deal with it': breaking India's taboo on menstruation

Nikita Azad, an Indian student, is challenging the ‘retrogressive, barbaric and misogynist customs’ with her #HappyToBleed campaign

On a road trip through south India last year a group of my friends wanted to stop at a Hindu temple of particular significance, but one held back. “I want to come …” she said, “but I can’t, as I have my period.” Here was a 38-year-old Indian woman, a barrister with a postgraduate degree, afraid to set foot in a temple because she was menstruating.

The taboo surrounding menstruation still prevails in both rural and urban India, where menstrual blood is considered impure. Some women are forbidden from preparing food or even entering the kitchen, one in five schoolgirls drop out of education when they begin menstruating, and more than 70% of women don’t have access to sanitary products.

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from Health & wellbeing | The Guardian http://ift.tt/1TBeQYp
via health

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