Project Report
| Jan 19, 2016
The Journey of Not Just a Piece of Cloth..
By Anshu Gupta | Founder Director
![Accessibility, Affordability & Awareness]()
Accessibility, Affordability & Awareness
Goonj’s ‘MY Pad’ is a better piece of cloth for women who have very little. It is meant for women, families and communities where cloth is still a scarce commodity. We are using MY Pads to reach these women and talk to them about their menstrual health and hygiene. In this process MY Pad has become a tool to get women to speak, to share and to better understand this basic biological process.
Many women in rural and slum India reuse cloth for menstruation but often don't have a safe and clean way of carrying their used pads (to wash and reuse later). Keeping in mind this practical difficulty, at Goonj we devised an innovative idea. We are adding a little pouch with Goonj cloth pads (MY Pads) made from flex banners and tarps (used ones) going out to rural India. These pouches are leak proof,cheap and a sustainable way of making reuse of cloth possible.
The journey of Not Just a piece of Cloth better known as NJPC is over a decade old now. It has gone through many trials and changes based on the inputs of the women who use it. My Pad is made after removing the hooks, button, elastic and any other hard material from the sorted cotton and semi cotton cloth. Soaked overnight in sanitizers followed by washing and then sun dried in open, first the outer cover of MY Pad is cut in the size of 12x 16 inches. It’s then ironed to make it moisture free. Then the smaller cloth pieces/shreds are wrapped in the outer cover as fillers. The outer cover is then folded, giving it a shape of a pad. Each packet of MY Pads has 15 pieces.
In this financial year alone more than 31,000 packets (@15 pads each packet) have been produced so far along with more than 16,000 undergarments (made out of waste hosiery material). These are not only reaching women in Maharashtra, Uttarakhand, Bihar, Bengal, MP and other states but also many slums of Delhi and NCR apart from going as an integral part of relief material. Right now MY Pads are being produced in Delhi only, with a daily production average of around 150 packets (i.e. 2250 pieces).
![Cover for Protection]()
Cover for Protection
![Making of Cover]()
Making of Cover
![My-Pad making unit]()
My-Pad making unit
![Process of making My-Pad]()
Process of making My-Pad
Links:
Dec 1, 2015
Voices From Khandwa, Madhya Pradesh
By Anshu Gupta | Founder Director
![Interacting with women...]()
Interacting with women...
Khandwa district of Madhya Pradesh is really the heart of central India. It is a largely tribal area, home to the Korku tribal community. Goonj has been working here for many years now, together with its local partner organization Spandan. Goonj has been working closely with Spandan on the issue of menstrual hygiene and management through its Not Just a Piece of cloth (NJPC) initiative. The tribal women of Khandwa had no access to knowledge on menstrual hygiene management and have been devoid of basic amenities like a sanitary cloth or a toilet apart from facing huge taboos because of the shame and silence around the issue. On a recent visit to Khandwa a two member Goonj team met more than 50 village women during a NJPC awareness session where the women shared their stories and experiences.
In Langoti village, Shyamwati has been using Goonj MY Pads (cloth sanitary pads) for the past four years. She said, “Earlier I used the tericot cloth (synthetic cloth for cloth pad) at home. I used to wash it dry and reuse it again. When I saw women attending the Goonj awareness sessions and taking cloth pad from Goonj. I too came along. I found that it has many advantages. I became more aware on the issue of menstruation. I also worked under Cloth for Work (another Goonj initiative where people work on their own issues and get material as reward) where we undertook land bunding and also worked on digging the well in Langoti village. I got ration and clothing and I am using that material.”
Women of the Korku tribe undergo a lot of suffering during menstruation facing huge challenges around washing, drying, changing and disposing. A lady shared, “I used cloth during menstruation. When I got married, I felt shy from my in laws and so I would store the cloth at a hidden place in the roof ceiling behind a wooden plank.” Here the houses are temporary sheds which are not completely water resistant. Still the women don’t have a choice. They continue to store their menstrual cloth thus, even when it’s raining. “I had no option. Many a times I couldn’t even dry up my cloth and even used a moist cloth pad. When I came to know about MY Pad it was a big relief.” She also mentioned that reusing a moist cloth pad made her feel uncomfortable and stinky.
The young girls our team met, expressed that earlier there was a lot of hesitation but now they had become bit comfortable on the issue and were now more aware about the disposal and hygiene aspects of using a cloth.
Ramwaati, another village resident said that earlier she washed the cloth pad in the nearby pond and dried it under a saree. This was cautiously done when there were no men around. She also shared that every time she tore a piece of tericot cloth and used it as a pad she was scolded by her family members. She further added, “MY Pad helped me a lot, now I reuse it and dry it separately and do not put it under a cloth for drying.”
In many remote communities of India the awareness sessions done by Goonj are making women more confident in taking steps to improve their menstrual hygiene practices. The big change is that they have started talking about the subject.
![Collecting Voices..]()
Collecting Voices..
![Women listening attentively..]()
Women listening attentively..
![Involving the men in the community...]()
Involving the men in the community...
![Involving the whole community..]()
Involving the whole community..
![Chuppi Todo Baithak..]()
Chuppi Todo Baithak..
Links:
Sep 3, 2015
The journey from cloth to 'MY Pad'..
By Anshu Gupta | Founder Director
![Making of My_Pad]()
Making of My_Pad
So we started with the simple - addressing a woman’s need for adequate clean cloth..
The bigger challenge with menstruation was an all pervasive culture of shame and silence around it, marred by social, cultural and religious myths, taboos and practices. Goonj’s MY Pads, could act as a trigger to get these women to talk about this closed up issue.
In April 2014 Goonj launched NJPC – A Million Voices campaign (www.njpc.goonj.org) asking people in the cities and villages across the world to share their thoughts, opinions and challenges around menses. We hope that when a million people talk about this issue, it will multiply into a culture of normalcy around menses.. That opening up of the issue will be the beginning of the world’s accurate understanding of the various aspects of the issue.
Read more - http://goonj.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/11.pdf
![Washing of cotton cloth]()
Washing of cotton cloth
![Sun-Dry of cloth]()
Sun-Dry of cloth
![Cloth to My-Pad]()
Cloth to My-Pad
![Menstrual Management Awareness]()
Menstrual Management Awareness
![Learning to make cloth into My-Pad]()
Learning to make cloth into My-Pad
Links: