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Shashi Tharoor's tweet about supporting period leave petition might well have begun a discussion that is essential to have - on women's menstrual health.
Shashi Tharoor’s tweet about supporting the period leave petition might well have begun a discussion that is essential to have – on women’s menstrual health.
The All India Professionals’ Congress (AIPC) have started a petition on change.org titled Make Laws & Policy Declaring Menstrual Leave For Women. The petition talks about granting menstrual leave of two days to women employed in both the private and the public sector. This leave would be in addition to sick leave and all employed women would get an option either to work from home or a paid leave of two days.
Shashi Tharoor, who is the chairperson of AIPC, tweeted the link of the petition and called it a move to create gender inclusive workspaces in the country.
Do you support Menstrual Leave For Women at Public& Private Workplaces? Join this initiative of @ProfCong by signing this Petition on https://t.co/qC1xqkEyev. Let's create gender inclusive workplaces in India. Sign the Petition: https://t.co/mw6iWjuBmT #WomensDay2020 — Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor) March 8, 2020
Do you support Menstrual Leave For Women at Public& Private Workplaces? Join this initiative of @ProfCong by signing this Petition on https://t.co/qC1xqkEyev. Let's create gender inclusive workplaces in India. Sign the Petition: https://t.co/mw6iWjuBmT #WomensDay2020
— Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor) March 8, 2020
Apart from Tharoor, Ninong Ering- a Lok Sabha member from Arunachal Pradesh- had also put forward a Private Member’s Bill titled ‘The Menstruation Benefit Bill, 2017’ which granted a two day paid menstrual leave. The bill, however, has not been taken up by the Parliament.
The petition has 2,015 signatures out of a total of 2,500 which it requires. It cites facts from studies which quote how a woman’s efficiency is reduced when she is menstruating. It also takes into account endometriosis – a condition where the pain is worsened to the extent of a woman passing out.
Tharoor’s tweet has gained a lot of traction and it is not the first time he has been vocal about menstrual issues. There have been many who have welcomed this proposal while many have out rightly spoken against it.
While many women welcomed the move, there were a lot who spoke against it.
The first person whose reply you’ll see to Shashi Tharoor’s tweet is Deepa Narayan, feminist academician and author of the hard hitting book Chup, that speaks of the silencing of women in Indian culture.
No, because it institutionalises women as weak, it is dangerous because you could then justify all kinds of laws that keep women at home to support their enfeeblement and for their protection @ShashiTharoor @BDUTT @KiranManral — Deepa Narayan (@deepavop) March 10, 2020
No, because it institutionalises women as weak, it is dangerous because you could then justify all kinds of laws that keep women at home to support their enfeeblement and for their protection @ShashiTharoor @BDUTT @KiranManral
— Deepa Narayan (@deepavop) March 10, 2020
Barkha Dutt is another big name who has taken a stand against the policy of menstrual leaves. She added a link to an article on the same issue which she wrote for The Washington Post. She tweeted about how measures like these “ghettoises women”, and that taking more leaves instantly brands a woman as being unemployable.
NO @ShashiTharoor menstrual leave ghettoises women, becomes one more excuse to close certain professional doors on women and treats the monthly period as a grand event instead of routine biology. Here's a piece I wrote in @washingtonpost on thi this https://t.co/OKqDslqpuZ https://t.co/f6N6sDS8Lw — barkha dutt (@BDUTT) March 8, 2020
NO @ShashiTharoor menstrual leave ghettoises women, becomes one more excuse to close certain professional doors on women and treats the monthly period as a grand event instead of routine biology. Here's a piece I wrote in @washingtonpost on thi this https://t.co/OKqDslqpuZ https://t.co/f6N6sDS8Lw
— barkha dutt (@BDUTT) March 8, 2020
Within Tharoor’s own party he has women who are against the petition. Shama Mohamed, a national media panelist, has tweeted how menstruation is not a debility and a woman can perform every activity when on her menstrual cycle.
Why should women have Menstrual leave? We are strong enough to work , run , exercise & do whatever a man does at his workplace while we have our menstrual cycle! https://t.co/fjLGH3XuGe — Shama Mohamed (@drshamamohd) March 8, 2020
Why should women have Menstrual leave? We are strong enough to work , run , exercise & do whatever a man does at his workplace while we have our menstrual cycle! https://t.co/fjLGH3XuGe
— Shama Mohamed (@drshamamohd) March 8, 2020
Sana Khan, a journalist has replied to Tharoor’s tweet by quoting from personal experience, that when she had started taking menstrual leaves, she was “branded as ‘someone who takes off every month’.”
I had started taking 'days off' for this. It then became a psychological barrier. I was even branded as 'someone who takes off every month'.Cited (by a sr editor) in a company that was interested in hiring me. Had to change that. Was easy.We don't need menstrual leaves, sir. — Sana Khan (@Sanakhan_m) March 8, 2020
I had started taking 'days off' for this. It then became a psychological barrier.
I was even branded as 'someone who takes off every month'.Cited (by a sr editor) in a company that was interested in hiring me.
Had to change that. Was easy.We don't need menstrual leaves, sir.
— Sana Khan (@Sanakhan_m) March 8, 2020
Nidhi Razadan who is the executive editor of NDTV was firm in her opinion against this proposition. “The short answer is NO,” she very succinctly says.
The short answer is NO. This will only increase biases against women at the work place. https://t.co/r3xxC4IMQo — Nidhi Razdan (@Nidhi) March 9, 2020
The short answer is NO. This will only increase biases against women at the work place. https://t.co/r3xxC4IMQo
— Nidhi Razdan (@Nidhi) March 9, 2020
A twitter user Aishwarya Palagummi tweeted that “menstruation is not a health ‘issue’ but unbearable menstrual cramps is a ‘problem’ that needs medical intervention”
3-5 days leave every month? Absurd! People will stop recruiting women. Moreover, menstruation is not a health 'issue' but unbearable menstrual cramps is a 'problem' that needs medical intervention. Healthy periods are not supposed to create any hindrance to day-to-day activities. — Aishwarya Palagummi (@APalagummi) March 8, 2020
3-5 days leave every month? Absurd! People will stop recruiting women. Moreover, menstruation is not a health 'issue' but unbearable menstrual cramps is a 'problem' that needs medical intervention. Healthy periods are not supposed to create any hindrance to day-to-day activities.
— Aishwarya Palagummi (@APalagummi) March 8, 2020
But there are quite a few who support the move, too.
Anna MM Vetticad, well known feminist journalist makes a valid point that while many have decried this petition, it is important to consider it, sharing an article by Kavita Krishnan on the subject, which says that the period leave debate is a reminder that workplaces must provide for women’s needs.
https://twitter.com/annavetticad/status/1236917446847725568
Period leave debate is a reminder that workplaces must provide for women’s needs – my article https://t.co/QYzmxPpeM6 via @scroll_in — Kavita Krishnan (@kavita_krishnan) July 23, 2017
Period leave debate is a reminder that workplaces must provide for women’s needs – my article https://t.co/QYzmxPpeM6 via @scroll_in
— Kavita Krishnan (@kavita_krishnan) July 23, 2017
A journalist who goes by the name YEMAYA tweeted about how period pain for many women are unbearable, some as and as a heart attack, sharing an article by The Diplomat that addresses this.
https://twitter.com/idli_idol/status/1236909424951754757
Another user Sidrah tweeted that every woman has a different physiology and menstrual leave should be made available.
Every woman's physiology is different. I can be a super woman during my periods while someone else can't. Primary dysmenorrhea is a medical condition. Be an advocate for ALL.To enable and empower would entail enabling equal opportunity through multiple layers of intervention — Sidrah (@SidrahDP) March 9, 2020
Every woman's physiology is different. I can be a super woman during my periods while someone else can't. Primary dysmenorrhea is a medical condition.
Be an advocate for ALL.To enable and empower would entail enabling equal opportunity through multiple layers of intervention
— Sidrah (@SidrahDP) March 9, 2020
As a feminist woman myself, I feel that while menstrual leaves is a noble concept because surely there are women who face terrible experiences while they are on their periods, it should not be made mandatory. There should be a provision, definitely, for those who genuinely need them, but having leaves because you’re a woman who menstruates does not make sense. Instead, why not have more women friendly policies of flexiwork and work from home options if necessary, and have all employers provide facilities for a woman to rest if she needs to?
Women employees taking leaves every month could also become detrimental for smaller organizations which do not have much employee strength. Woman want to be treated as human beings with different needs, not live a diversity case that gives the company a tick mark.
A Journalism student. When not busy with college and assignments, I read a lot. Big time foodie and dog mom. Pop culture, feminism and news gets me excited. read more...
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