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‘I won’t be ashamed’: Nigerian women fight ‘period poverty’

For years, whenever Veronica Ogar’s period began, she stuffed a rag into her underwear. She avoided the local market where she earned a living while her period lasted. 

“If I risk going to the market and my clothes get stained, I would be the joke of the whole community,”  she says.

Why We Wrote This

“Period poverty” – a lack of access to menstrual education and products – got worse during the pandemic. But increasingly, women are finding local solutions to a problem familiar the world over.

Globally, millions of women and girls continue to be punished, or even endangered, when they have their periods. They lack access to facilities and products to manage their periods with dignity and have to navigate community stigma and sanctions.

In Nigeria, where 40 million women are living in extreme poverty, such period poverty has been worsened by burgeoning inflation. Campaigners are finding innovative ways and local solutions to tackle the issue.

One morning, 50-odd women sat beneath a baobab tree in Ijegu. Goodness Ogeyi Odey, of the Edupad Yala project, sketched on the ground a diagram explaining the menstrual cycle – the first time most were seeing a scientific explanation.

The project also empowers women by training them to make reusable menstrual pads. Ms. Ogar, a beneficiary, says she’s unlearned myths she carried since childhood – and passed to her own children. “I have learned that periods are not unclean, and it is not something I should be ashamed of,” she says. “I will [keep] making my own pads and using them.” 

For years, whenever Veronica Ogar’s period began, she would grab a piece of old cloth she kept for the purpose, fold it into layers, and stuff it into her underwear. Over the following days, she would keep to herself, avoiding the local market where she earned a living – her makeshift pad was barely fit for purpose – instead taking a financial hit while her period lasted. 

“If I risk going to the market and my clothes get stained, I would be the joke of the whole community,” she says, highlighting the societal pressure common in the region. It had never occurred to her she even had a choice. “It’s what I had been told to do from when I was child,” she adds, speaking in Nigerian Pidgin English.

Across the globe, millions of women and girls continue to be punished, or even endangered, when they have their periods. Not only do they lack access to facilities and products to manage their periods with dignity, they also have to navigate entrenched community stigma and sanctions.

Why We Wrote This

“Period poverty” – a lack of access to menstrual education and products – got worse during the pandemic. But increasingly, women are finding local solutions to a problem familiar the world over.

The first time Ms. Ogar experienced menstruation, she hid in her room in the house where she lived with her aunt in the northern Nigerian state of Kaduna. 

“I was confused and didn’t understand why I was bleeding. I had never heard the term ‘period’ before and so didn’t know what it was,” she recalls. Eventually, a neighbor persuaded her to come out of her room. 

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