“I’m hopeful that sooner or later I’ll hear women talking about their menstrual cramps with the identical ease with which they are saying they’ve a headache, with none disgrace hooked up to it,” says Preeti Sharma, founding father of the Prazna Basis.
A 2019 report by NGO Dasra states {that a} staggering 2.3 crore women in India drop out of college every year as a result of inadequate entry to menstrual hygiene. The absence of sanitary pads, clear water and sanitation services, coupled with the societal stigma surrounding menstruation, exposes women to critical well being points and, at instances, social ostracism. That is what Preeti hopes to alter.
Rising up in Gokul, a small city in Uttar Pradesh, within the Nineteen Nineties, Preeti skilled the social stigma surrounding menstruation firsthand. Her faculty, like a number of others, had no correct washroom services, no water, and no secure area for younger women who had hit puberty. All of the practicalities and the social stigma round menstruation invariably discouraged women from persevering with faculty.
“The college that I went to already had a decrease variety of women than boys. And it could dwindle even additional when the ladies, as soon as they reached a ‘curtain age’ would drop out of college,” she tells The Higher India.
When Preeti had her daughters and noticed them battle of their colleges, she realised the extent of the issue.
“My daughters go to a a lot better faculty than I did. So, after they obtained their interval, the issue wasn’t water or cleanliness. It was that they nonetheless don’t really feel just like the surroundings was secure sufficient to discuss it overtly,” Preeti shares.
Eliminating taboos
In Could 2018, Prazna Basis was established to make sure that women in underprivileged areas wouldn’t face the identical challenges Preeti confronted. The organisation started as a response to the shortage of menstrual hygiene schooling, entry to sanitary merchandise, and the silence surrounding menstruation.
“The aim is to make menstrual well being schooling a common proper and to do away with the obstacles that forestall underprivileged youngsters and girls from getting correct schooling and healthcare,” says Preeti.
To attain that aim, Prazna launched Challenge Kishori, which goals to coach younger women about menstrual hygiene and supply them with important hygiene kits.
At this time, Challenge Kishori is the cornerstone of Prazna’s efforts in creating menstrual well being consciousness amongst schoolchildren, particularly in marginalised communities. “Sanitary pads are reasonably priced now, the Authorities additionally arms them out. However now we have labored with ladies who come from the labour class and don’t even have the cash to purchase underwear,” says Preeti.
To assist ladies prioritise hygiene throughout menstruation, the muse provides ladies a complete equipment of necessities that features underwear, rubbish baggage (to show correct disposal), antiseptic liquids for hygienic wash, and paper soaps to encourage correct handwashing habits.
Past the kits, Challenge Kishori largely focuses on educating women about their our bodies, serving to them perceive the menstrual cycle, and making a secure area for them to ask questions.
“We’ve coated over 100 colleges inside two months, each in and round Jaipur. And these are distant areas the place no one ever goes,” Preeti mentions. By this outreach, Prazna has already educated over 20,000 ladies on menstruation and hygiene.
What’s distinctive about Challenge Kishori is its method to breaking down the taboos round menstruation by peer-to-peer interplay. In every faculty, ‘Kishori Golf equipment’ have been established, bringing collectively women who would lead conversations and share their experiences.
“I’ve seen numerous women, particularly in the event that they get their durations younger, get very nervous. They do not know take care of it. What Prazna and Preeti do is give a sure sense of reassurance,” says Kavita Sharma, principal of a authorities faculty in Jaipur.
“Additionally they assist women navigate this subsequent stage of their life, whether or not or not it’s emotionally, mentally or bodily, as a result of it’s a lot for one small particular person to undergo on their very own,” she provides.
Constructing belief and understanding
By creating an surroundings the place women really feel snug, the programme encourages ongoing conversations about menstrual well being. One technique employed by Prazna was to make use of feminine lecturers as intermediaries — trusted adults who may assist facilitate conversations between the ladies and the organisation. This technique not solely helped guarantee privateness and belief but additionally empowered native educators to take possession of the initiative.
The programme additionally addresses dietary and dietary wants. “Manner too many younger women have anaemia and you’ll’t continually take dietary supplements for that. They have to be educated about good meals as properly, and when the scenario is dangerous we do contain and educate the dad and mom too,” Preeti explains.
“I assist folks perceive technical know-hows. I’ve been serving to with workshops for the reason that begin of the muse, so I do know what sort of questions folks have concerning menses and the myths hooked up to it,” says Dr Shailja Jain, a gynaecologist and shut affiliate of Preeti. She trains the volunteers in order that they’re correctly ready when talking to inquisitive younger women who might need some fascinating questions.
The muse additionally works intently with Deepika Godara, an advocate who engages with slum dwelling ladies and offers them a run down of their primary human rights. “Positive our nation obtained independence in 1947, however the ladies are nonetheless not free. There’s home abuse, a scarcity of correct healthcare, and a lot misinformation,” she says.
By informing ladies about helpline numbers, authorities insurance policies, and different assets they’ve at their disposal, she provides them the ability to take cost of their very own lives. “Many complaints of home abuse filed by slum or labour ladies should not taken critically. So, we ask the ladies to guarantee that when their grievance is being written down, it needs to be written on a paper of a specific color, in order that they realize it’s truly being filed,” shares Deepika.
Making males part of the dialog
One of the vital inspiring points of Prazna’s work is the best way they’ve concerned male lecturers and male college students within the dialog. Traditionally, menstruation has been seen as a subject for girls solely which makes it an isolating ‘us and them’ expertise. “We had gone to a authorities faculty, and a instructor requested us to incorporate the boys of the category within the workshop as properly. And we have been more than pleased to incorporate this concept in our method of working,” Preeti notes.
Male lecturers and volunteers have additionally been concerned in workshops, breaking down obstacles of disgrace and making the subject extra inclusive.
The outcomes have been encouraging.
“I type of knew what menstruation was. However earlier, I used to really feel hesitant to discuss these items, particularly at dwelling. I used to really feel that possibly that is one thing that’s imagined to be saved a secret. However then once we noticed our lecturers, and other people from Prazna, discuss these items, that hesitancy has gone away,” shares Sonali, a Class 10 pupil from Jaipur.
Past its grassroots work, Prazna additionally advocates for complete nationwide insurance policies. Whereas there are numerous programmes which distribute pads, Preeti believes that menstrual schooling must transcend simply offering merchandise.
“It’s good to present pads, however there needs to be a programme that occurs a minimum of each few weeks the place the dialog is reopened and there’s a steady dialogue. As a result of a taboo can’t be eased with a single workshop,” Preeti concludes.
Edited by Arunava Banerjee, All pictures courtesy Preeti Sharma