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Story Lenny Says January 24, 2019

Lenny Says: It Starts and Ends With You

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Myanmar’s women and girls on Facebook. Image by Shaina Shealy. Myanmar, 2018.
English

Journalist Shaina Shealy reports on the impact of today's digital technologies on women and girls in...

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Burmese women perform traditional dance during closing ceremony of Myanmar New Year Water Festival 2011 in Yangon, Myanmar. Image by Htoo Tay Zar. Myanmar, 2011.
Burmese women perform traditional dance during closing ceremony of Myanmar New Year Water Festival 2011 in Yangon, Myanmar. Image by Htoo Tay Zar. Myanmar, 2011.

There is a deeply-ingrained social stigma attached to menstruation in Myanmar, and young girls and women are taught from an early age that it is dirty and shameful. Women find themselves stigmatized to the point that they are not permitted to touch men (including their husbands) when they are menstruating, and they are often forced outside of their homes. Pulitzer grantee Shaina Shealy was recently on the Lenny Says podcast to share the story of Nandar Gyawalli, a 23-year-old Burmese activist of Nepali descent who uses Facebook to break the cultural taboo surrounding menstruation.

A link to the full podcast can be found here.

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