History of Feminism
Related: About this forumThe Scary Connection Between Sexual Assault and the Lack of Toilets
http://www.takepart.com/article/2015/11/19/world-toilet-day-oped?cmpid=tpdaily-eml-2015-11-19-RefugeesSexual assault has become a growing concern in India, where reported cases are on the rise. In 2012, the infamous gang rape and death of Delhi medical student Jyoti Singh rattled the nations conscience. But it wouldnt be the last case of sexual violence to stir a media frenzy. In 2014, two teenage sisters from the state of Bihar went missing after leaving their home to defecate at night. They were later found raped, killed, and hanging from a tree. Nearly 400 rapes could have been avoided in 2012 if women had safe access to toilets, noted a Bihar police chief.
Of course, this issue affects Indians far beyond the borders of Bihar. Nationwide, around 70 percent of rural homes dont have toilets. Over 50 percent of the population defecates in the open. Despite the health risksdiseases such as typhoid and cholera can be easily contracted by defecating in open, unsanitary conditionsIndia is still grappling to come to terms with this reality.
The issue is personal for me. As a woman, I understand what it means to feel unsafe walking down the street. Violence against women is not just a problem in India but across the globe. According to No Ceilings, one in three women worldwide has experienced physical and sexual violence. This crisis is not about an uncivilized mind-set of a particular culture. Its about the legacy of a patriarchal and economically inequitable society that affects every single one of us. Our societies, wherein women are paid less than men, are allowed fewer political and social privileges than men, and are constantly objectified in popular culture, breed both inequality in access as well as a rape culture that validates violence against women. The inability to access something as basic as a toilet without the fear of being raped speaks to larger systemic issues.
MsJaneFuzzyWuzzy
(58 posts)"sells" gifts to give to friends and family on gift-giving occasions, to benefit families, communities and kids, especially girls, in the developing world. They include school supplies and farm animals on the smaller end, and range up to equipping an entire schoolhouse or providing a well for a village. The NGO has a particular focus on "gender equity".
One of the intermediate gifts is providing girls' latrines for a school - because the lack of safe and sanitary toilet facilities is a bar to girls getting an education.
As the article says, the problems that result from lack of access to toilet facilities do speak to larger systemic issues; not having a toilet should not mean being victimized. But providing that facility will help women to eventually address those issues. Getting an education, having a better chance to maintain health and avoid disease, and eliminating a daily source of fear and exposure to violence are all crucial to women's ability to do that.
To quote the article:
... empowering women with the autonomy and equity that come with safe toilet access is an essential step toward a better world.
Maybe I'll make this a group prezzie for my siblings and their partners and kids this year.
eridani
(51,907 posts)Excellent organization. I've been doing donations for Christmas in the names of various family members for several years now. Well worth it.
MsJaneFuzzyWuzzy
(58 posts)for instance. The origin of the "care package".
The other is Plan International
https://www.planusa.org/empower-a-girl
hm, I had thought Plan was the one with the gift catalogue that includes things like school supplies and latrines, but it doesn't seem to have joined the holiday giving crowd. Sanitation in refugee camps is one of the projects it undertakes with cash donations though.
https://www.planusa.org/water-and-sanitation-transforms-lives-of-car-refugees
Time to stock up for the holidays.