
Nepal – Rural Women Still Banished to a Rustic Hut When Having Their Periods & Considered “Impure”
Author: WUNRN
Date: May 17, 2017
BBC’s Documentary Nepal – Banished For Bleeding explores why getting your period in Nepal is a big deal. Menstruating women face many restrictions – they’re not allowed to worship or enter the kitchen. Young Nepali reporters Divya Shrestha and Nirmala Limbu still remember the shock at suddenly being excluded from festivities for being “impure”. They travel from Kathmandu to the far west of Nepal, where periods are still subject to deep taboos. Here, menstruating women are banished from home for four days and have to sleep in an open hut. This is not just unhygienic but it can be unsafe. Last year, a teenage girl died, suffocated by the fire she lit to stay warm. This illegal practice is known as chhaupadi and is based on the belief that menstruation is a curse. If women aren’t banished from the home, it is said, terrible things will happen: snakes or tigers might attack and cattle will die. Such beliefs are hard to eradicate, but Divya and Nirmala find that some young women are rebelling. They now know that menstruation is a natural process – the difficult thing is persuading their elders.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-sh/banished_for_bleeding
Scroll down site for multiple photos and documentary text.
VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DzhAcytnt8
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