By ELSPETH VELTEN
The dreaded moment had come – my first period during my three months in India was due and I was out of tampons.
If the search for modern menstrual products had been hard in Malaysia, I knew in India it would be much worse. I heaved a sigh of relief when I found a pharmacy in touristy Varanasi that had a few dusty boxes of OBs, but couldn’t help but notice the curious look on other male customers faces when the shopkeeper handed me the boxes.
It was clear these men had no idea what I was purchasing – a woman’s cycle isn’t exactly dinner table conversation for India’s conservative society – and I realised that the reality of being a menstruating woman in India was way more intense than I could even imagine.
The reality is that most women in India don’t have access to even the most rudimentary disposable sanitary products and that time of the month can be crippling for a woman trying to take care of a family or for a girl trying to make it through high school. In a 2011 survey commissioned by the India’s government, AC Neilsen found that the number of women using pads in the country is just 12%, and that the remaining 88% of women use materials like germ-ridden cloths, ashes and sand.
When Indian man Arunachalam Muruganantham learned about the less-than-hygienic situation from his new wife who was trying to hide the soiled rags she recycled every month, he was shocked. Arunachalam was immediately determined to impress his wife by improving how she managed her period.
Top Comments
What a bloody hero this guy is, literally!
Now all he has to do is invent the tampon machine.
Ha ha another great "boom tish" moment!
Menstruation is seen as dirty and evil in India, and many women are forced to sleep outside and not allowed to touch males during menstruation. As men typically control finances and women are left outside, paying for sanitary items is not a priority. These poor women are not only left to face the elements, animals and insects, but awful predators. Not taking away from what this dude did cos he sounds amazing but its a far more complicated issue than this article suggests.
Orthodox Middle Eastern visitors taught Indians it was dirty for otherwise it was ~ALWAYS celebrated in India. Check Hindu rituals e.g Maharashtra, Karnatak welcomed menstruating women. Hindu Goddesses' periods were and are also celebrated ... The distaste originates from Judaism and influenced others in the M East, including Islam, Christianity and Zoroastrians. However the next step is to make this product and disposable diapers 100% biodegradable.