Note by moderator: I have moved this posting into the existing thread on reusable pads because it fits nicely here. (EvM)
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Dear Forum,
I'm completely new in the field of sanitation and need your advice.
Something I hadn't realized before I dealt with this topic is the fact that it is again women and girls who suffer most from the unpleasant circumstances. I've already written in another thread about our project in Gando, where we would like to install ecosan-toilets in the CFG which is presently being built. And then, ("of course") with separate latrine blocks for boys and girls.
But I also came across another way how one could help the girls cope with their menstrual situation. Brwosing through the internet i came across
www.afripads.com, a self-help organization run by Ugandan women who manufactures low-cost, reusable (washable) cloth sanitary pads.
In this forum I also came across the idea of a menstrual cup and read about the reservations in many mainly Islamic communities against the use of these. I can imagine this is also the case in our partner village, Gando in Burkina Faso (see
www.fuergando.de and
www.lichtfuergando.de).
I would very much like to introduce the Afripads in the village, but I'm not sure whether - as a white male - I can do so without crossing cultural, religious or social borders. I've been to Gando three times before, and I think I've got quite informal, good contact with a woman teacher and one of the women in the village who prepared my meals. Do you think it is possible to confide in them, talk with them openly about the problem and have them introduce the pads if possible?
Has anyone experience about how and if these pads are accepted in African (Burkinabe) communities? Of course it could only be the second-best solution to using disposable pads, but the women and girls in the village can't afford these.
Thank you very much for your patience and hope to hear form you soon,
Peter