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On the second year of the world menstrual hygiene day on May 28th, I write this blog. I write it as I read articles, posters and materials dismissing cultural practices around menstruation, calling them Menstrual Taboos. I write it as I read about organizations deciding for Indian women based on what they think is superstitious beliefs which need to be uprooted. I write, for all the women across India, who follow menstrual rituals and have asked me what these practices signify. I write for the men who have never known what to make of menstrual practices — to support them or to dismiss it.
I write because I feel responsible for reviving what has been lost. I write with the learning and the realization that none of these practices were originally meant to suppress women. Over the last one year, my team has traveled to 8 States across India to learn the origin of menstrual practices and their impact on women in rural India. The biggest surprise was that every time we dug deeper, it always revealed a positive side of the story and it became obvious that none of the menstrual practices came into being because women are impure or unholy.
Many of us get stuck in trying to prove whether or not these practices are scientific. For most women, it is reverence to an age old belief system that they want to be keepers of. Therefore, I tried to consciously stay away from validating cultural practices scientifically. Instead, I wanted to focus on the spirit behind these practices, which is what influences attitudes towards menstruation.
However, my explorations took me in a roundabout way to science itself. A different level of science though. Many a time, it seemed that each culture has a whole new explanation of the same menstrual practice such as not going to the temple. However, as I tried to consolidate all that I learnt over the last one year, I realized that most practices arise from a common ground — Ancient Indian Science, which includes Ayurveda, Yoga, Meditation, Mantra and Astrology.