Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Breaking the cycle of women’s poverty

Reusable sanitary pads are the subject of acclaimed photograph­er Julia Gunther’s latest project, writes MICHAEL MORRIS

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THE beauty of the objects, the colouring, the patterns, the artistry, at a glance seem to remove them from what ought to be an unremarkab­le routine and practical function. In rural Malawi, however, there is a subliminal beauty, too, in the prettily crafted reusable sanitary pads as they are part of an effective strategy to give women a better chance in life and free them from the taboos that limit them.

As Nick Schonfeld writes on Julia Gunther’s website: “In Malawi, a sanitary pad can determine if a girl stays in school, if a woman keeps her job or if she manages to grow enough food to feed herself and her family.”

It is sobering that girls or young women who cannot afford the prohibitiv­ely expensive and hard to come by disposable pads, can miss out on as much as 20 percent of their school year, or risk being fired for staying home from work. And if they cannot afford the disposable products, Schonfeld writes, many women resort to “crude, homemade alternativ­es such as rags, banana fibres, mattress foam or toilet paper, improvised and often unhygienic quick fixes which lead to embarrassi­ng leaks and recurrent infections”.

In a recent feature on Gunther’s work, Priscilla Frank, arts writer on the Huffington Post, noted that, in Malawi “a single sanitary pad costs roughly a day’s pay”.

There’s another element to the reusable pad; they are designed, tailored and sold by young women, further enhancing the slow but sure drive to reverse gender discrimina­tion. Each “School Girl Pack” featuring three washable pads and a pair of underwear sells for around $3.50.

Gunther, well-known to Weekend Argus readers for her photo essays on topics ranging from the Black Mamba Anti-Poaching Unit to lesbians living in Khayelitsh­a (all part of her ongoing Proud Women of Africa series), heard about the Malawian project from a friend.

“It focuses on trying to create sustainabl­e projects which not only help the children in the short term but also try to better their position in society – in the case of the reusable sanitary pads, enabling girls to stay in school, while also providing a reliable source of income. This seemed to me a good example of the right kind of aid,” she said.

The project is run by Green Malata Entreprene­urial Village, set up by the Children’s Fund of Malawi, a Dutch charity, to teach children, mostly orphans between 14 and 19, tangible skills such as tailoring, welding, or carpentry.

“Most can’t afford to go to school, or have been forced to drop out, leaving them with little means of survival in a country that ranks as one of the poorest in the world,” Gunther said.

It is a society in which, for women, the effects of poverty are exacerbate­d by gender discrimina­tion.

Gunther noted that “in Malawi, as in many countries, menstruati­on is a taboo … not so much in the sense that nobody talks about it, but that women are ridiculed and discrimina­ted against while on their period”. For those who can’t afford disposable pads, the only option is to “stay home from school or work”.

Berlin-born Gunther started out as a cinematogr­apher, but in tandem with stills photograph­y. It was on her first visit to South Africa in 2008, while working for a production company in Cape Town, that she channelled the power of the fixed image into an extended project to celebrate the strength, pride, resourcefu­lness and stamina of women in Africa.

Her latest Malawian venture was a bit different, yet “for me, the spirit of the pictures remains the same: a positive, aspiration­al approach to a serious subject, something that Africa needs more of and, at the same time, a counter to the image of Africa and Africans as being helpless”.

Gunther acknowledg­ed that while the girls she photograph­ed were “very shy, and found it hard to talk about menstruati­on and how they dealt with it”, this had “as much to do with their age, as with the topic”.

Malawi’s constituti­on guaranteed women equal rights, “but in reality women remain disadvanta­ged in many aspects of daily life”, particular­ly in lacking access to education, employment and healthcare, and often being dependent on husbands, fathers or brothers.

This made schooling a primary route to empowermen­t and self-reliance, underscori­ng the value of reusable sanitary pads in “giving women the independen­ce they deserve”.

Gunther added: “For me the main aim with this story is to illustrate how a seemingly incongruou­s object, like a sanitary pad, can significan­tly impact the lives of young women. It’s an item we take for granted in the West, but it can make or break the future of someone in a developing country.”

● For more informatio­n, or to help, visit www.childrensf­undmalawi.com or facebook.com/ChildrensF­undofMalaw­i/

 ?? PICTURES: JULIA GUNTHER ?? Internatio­nal phtographe­r Julia Gunther documents an unusual project in Malawi, the making of reusable sanitary pads (in beautiful material) as a contributi­on to keeping girls at school.
PICTURES: JULIA GUNTHER Internatio­nal phtographe­r Julia Gunther documents an unusual project in Malawi, the making of reusable sanitary pads (in beautiful material) as a contributi­on to keeping girls at school.
 ??  ?? The reusable pads are designed, tailored and sold by young women, further enhancing the drive to reverse gender discrimina­tion.
The reusable pads are designed, tailored and sold by young women, further enhancing the drive to reverse gender discrimina­tion.
 ??  ?? The reusable sanitary pads are part of a strategy to give women a better chance in life and free them from the taboos that limit them.
The reusable sanitary pads are part of a strategy to give women a better chance in life and free them from the taboos that limit them.

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