Nepal's menstrual exiles

OrbitalDawn

Ulysses Everett McGill
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In parts of rural Nepal, women are forced to isolate themselves in huts or caves during their menstruation period.

This is the size of the shed where Durga Buda, 31, spends four nights every month. Known as a "goth", it is made of bamboo, straw and wood; walls are caked with mud and cow dung.

"Now I am used to it, but the fear of wild animals, snakes and drunkards is always there," she says.

At night she uses a thin wool blanket, frayed at the edges. Some holes in the mosquito net are stitched, some patched with safety pins. Her family of eight, including in-laws, sleep in a mud-brick house - but she is exiled to the backyard, next to two cows and six goats.

Buda is following the centuries-old chaupadi ritual, prevalent in far and mid-western regions of Nepal. During menstruation and childbirth, women are isolated to a cowshed, hut, barn or cave because they are believed to be impure - their touch is said to contaminate - resulting in doom for the family, neighbours and domestic animals.

During Buda's first period, she was segregated for 11 days, "I was scared, cold and confused. But the fear of sin was bigger," she says.

The Hindu tradition is common to all castes in the region. Women who violate the practice are blamed for crop failures, illnesses and sudden deaths of animals. "Who wants to be ostracised?" she asks.

Monthly exile

There are reports of chaupadi leading to deaths, attacks by wild animals, snakebites, diseases, rapes, poor mental health, and infants dying of pneumonia. A 16-year-old girl suffocated to death in her goth. In recent years, some women have turned their back on the ritual: a few burnt their sheds, and some villages are known as "chaupadi-free zones".

But although the country's supreme court banned practising chaupadi in 2005, the custom dies hard. It remains firmly rooted in many villages, especially in remote hill areas. A 2011 report estimated that 95 percent of women in Achham district follow it.

By sunset Buda has finished eight hours of work, cutting grass and collecting wood. Lunch and dinner consists of flatbread and salt. Meat or dairy products are prohibited.

"It is said if we touch men or anything in the house, cook or use public water tanks and wells, our God, Debti, will punish us. Our hands and legs will be twisted, our eyes plucked out," Buda explains. Fruits will rot, cows will stop giving milk, wells will dry up, houses will burn and tigers will attack at night.

Even so, when Buda gave birth the first time she had doubts. "It should have been a joyous event, but I was alone for 11 days - nursing, feeding, cooking and cleaning. I almost refused to stay in the shed." But she was afraid of bad luck befalling her son. More than 80 percent of women give birth at home in Nepal.

She remembers thinking, ''I had to be strong like my mother and the women before her."

'Gender violence'

Aruna Uprety, a doctor and women's health rights activist, calls chaupadi a form of gender violence and the "most degrading" cultural practice in Nepal. She has written a book called Chaupadi: a Harmful Practice for Women.

Discriminating against women because of their bodies' natural processes is a crime, she says. "We cannot identify the perpetrator as man or woman. The religious and cultural leaders are to blame."

Older women justify the practice, saying that in earlier times, sanitary pads or undergarments were not used. Menstrual blood would flow out, leading to a foul smell, so women were sent to outhouses. The same conditions existed in eastern Nepal but there is no chaupadi there, Uprety argues.

During the 10-year Maoist insurgency, many goths were razed. "Instead of creating awareness leading to create social change, they [the Maoists] used force. When the peace process started, the goths were rebuilt," Uprety says. Many Maoists and even some female anti-chaupadi activists follow the tradition. Schools give paid leave to female teachers during menstruation, and menstruating students are not allowed to attend classes.

The dread of divine wrath cuts across class, caste, education and ideological divisions. "Imagine the shame and mental agony when school officials, your family, your whole community keeps account of your menstruation cycle," Uprety says. Some women pray for early menopause; others gulp down Depo-Provera, a contraceptive that temporarily halts menstruation.

In recent times, feminist groups and developmental agencies have published booklets and posters and launched radio programmes and awareness drives in communities and schools. Nowadays, in some villages, women sleep in a separate room in the main house instead of in outhouses. But they are still untouchable.

"[The] government banned it, but there is not a single case of punishment, fine or reprimanding," Uprety adds.

Generational debate

Nepal's far and mid-western regions make up half of the country's area and 23 percent of the population. Just under half its people live under the poverty line. Apart from underdevelopment and gender inequality, major challenges in the area include caste discrimination, unemployment, seasonal migration to India, widespread child and bonded labour, malnutrition, high infant and maternal mortality rates, low literacy and poor connectivity because of difficult terrain.

Lalaji, a village elder in Achham, believes the tradition should be respected. "The new generation wants to change things. But as long as we live we will teach them what is right and ask them to follow our Hindu culture," he says, sitting on a cot chewing betel nuts. "Many people have fallen sick because of eating food cooked by menstruating women," he adds.

Some younger men oppose the practice, like 27-year-old Ramesh Bhatta of Dhangadhi. "I know it is very tough for women to live alone, so far from the house. I feel bad. It is unfair that we sleep in comfort, while they are exposed to danger."

Tulsi Devi is a grassroots volunteer with Feminist Dalit Organization in Kailali district. "Some of us refused to follow the custom. We were able to convince a few families to change. But older women are strong believers of this system and want their daughters and daughters-in-laws to follow these customs," she says.

She shares her story with other women to quell their fears and doubts. "I say 'look: My cows and chickens are fine, we still have a harvest, my body is normal'."

She is lucky her family supported her. "Women cannot decide what is safe, what is good for them. Everyone has a say."

Devi points to a mound where her goth once stood. The only remaining sign of its existence is a bamboo stump, sticking out among overgrown weeds.
 
Now that is an awesome idea. I'll discuss with the SO for next month
 
Yeah, we had a small hut back home in India. During my sisters/mothers/aunts menstrual cycles, we used to get them to go and live there.
 
Think this tradition should be practiced worldwidelol
 
Leviticus 15:19-30
And if a woman have an issue, and her issue in her flesh be blood, she shall be put apart seven days: and whosoever toucheth her shall be unclean until the even. And every thing that she lieth upon in her separation shall be unclean: every thing also that she sitteth upon shall be unclean. And whosoever toucheth her bed shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the even. And whosoever toucheth any thing that she sat upon shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the even. And if it be on her bed, or on any thing whereon she sitteth, when he toucheth it, he shall be unclean until the even. And if any man lie with her at all, and her flowers be upon him, he shall be unclean seven days; and all the bed whereon he lieth shall be unclean. And if a woman have an issue of her blood many days out of the time of her separation, or if it run beyond the time of her separation; all the days of the issue of her uncleanness shall be as the days of her separation: she shall be unclean. Every bed whereon she lieth all the days of her issue shall be unto her as the bed of her separation: and whatsoever she sitteth upon shall be unclean, as the uncleanness of her separation. And whosoever toucheth those things shall be unclean, and shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the even. But if she be cleansed of her issue, then she shall number to herself seven days, and after that she shall be clean. And on the eighth day she shall take unto her two turtles, or two young pigeons, and bring them unto the priest, to the door of the tabernacle of the congregation. And the priest shall offer the one for a sin offering, and the other for a burnt offering; and the priest shall make an atonement for her before the LORD for the issue of her uncleanness.
 
Leviticus 15:19-30

In ancient Israel and Judah, as in other ancient Near Eastern societies, purity was always an important category.
Judeans increased their concern for purity during and after the Babylonian Exile (598-539 BCE) when purity regulations were codified, seen especially in the book of Leviticus.

The purity issues addressed in Leviticus are many can be identified in the following major categories:
touching impure objects (ch. 5); eating fat and blood (7); food—acceptable/unacceptable species of animals to eat (ch. 11), skin diseases (13–14), genital discharges—normal/abnormal (12 and 15), the sanctuary (16), sacrificial animals (17), sexual partners (18 and 20), everyday transactions (19), the priesthood (8 and 21–22), the calendar (23 and 25), profaning the divine name (24), and vows (27).

Leviticus has several rules for the woman's menstrual period: 1) she is unclean for seven days; 2) anything she lies upon or sits upon is unclean; 3) anyone who touches her, her bedding, or what she has sat upon is unclean until evening; and 4) anyone who has intercourse with her is unclean for seven days (15:19-24). Similar ordinances obtain for a woman with irregular vaginal bleeding (15:25-31).

But this is paralleled for men with genital discharges (15:32-33). This is given sacral and cosmic scope ( a taboo) in that it relates to both Yahweh and Yahweh's sanctuary (15:31).

If we are to understand the ancient texts which Jewish and Christian communities hold as scripture, we must pay close attention to how symbols such as blood bear deep emotive power, communicating anger, disgust, relief, and devotion. They are part of larger systems of meaning and self-understanding, and cannot be pulled out of context without loss. Understanding the purity systems of ancient Israelites and early Christians can also help us reflect on our own systems of meaning and the culturally-defined systems of purity in which we participate.

Just be glad such Old Testamentic ideals aren't still held to by most
 
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