Once she got her period, Gauri Kumari Bayak did what girls and women across Nepal do when they menstruate — she left her family, trudged through the cold, and set up camp in a makeshift hut until she stopped bleeding.

But this time, she didn’t make it out alive.

Bayak, a 22-year-old student, reading tutor, and tailor, died of smoke inhalation after her windowless hut filled with smoke from a small fire she made to warm herself as she slept in the chilly Himalayan foothills.

Take Action:  #ItsBloodyTime World Leaders Prioritize Menstrual Hygiene for Girls’ Education

She is just the latest girl or woman to die while sequestered in a menstruating hut, an ancient custom known as Chhaupadi practiced by some Hindus. Though Nepal criminalized Chhaupadi last summer, menstrual huts persist throughout the country, especially in remote areas of the West.

Read More: Nepal Criminalizes Forcing Girls and Women Into Menstrual Huts During Their Period

Embed from Getty Images

Some Hindu communities believe that menstruating women bring bad luck, including natural disasters, so they banish them to isolated huts where they are vulnerable to rape, animal attacks, and dangerous weather.

Last year, for example, a poisonous snake killed a teenage girl inside a hut and in 2016, another girl suffocated to death in her smoke-filled animal shed.

Read More: Nepali Teen Dies in Menstruation Hut After Starting Fire to Stay Warm

Around the world, women face stigma and oppression related to menstruation — a totally natural and universal phenomenon that has been branded as unclean or even, in the case of Nepal’s Hindu communities, toxic

Global Citizen campaigns on ending these menstruation taboos and ensuring that all girls and women have access to safe hygiene. You can take action here.  

After communities and activists toppled period taboos throughout 2017, the persistence of Chhaupadi in Nepal proves there is still a lot of work to do in the new year.

That includes empowering women accustomed to Chhaupadi and other dangerous taboos.

Bayak’s husband, a police officer, said he did not banish his wife to the menstruation hut, The New York Times reports. Instead, he said, Bayak isolated herself in the hut to honor the custom she had grown up with in rural Nepal.

“What this is, is segregation,” Nepalese activist Radha Paudel told the New York Times. “We as a society don’t talk enough about it. We don’t talk about dignity, we don’t talk about women’s rights.

News

Defeat Poverty

Women Are Still Dying In Illegal Menstrual Huts

By David Brand