First Lady hosts successful ‘Chari-Tea’ event
– raises $6M for initiative to end period poverty for women and girls
Kaieteur News – In a historic bid to end period poverty in Guyana, First Lady, Arya Ali successfully hosted with a fundraising initiative titled ‘Chari-Tea’ last Sunday at State House. The donations for Sunday’s event amounted to $6 million – all of which will be used to purchase sanitary products which will be distributed to school-aged girls in the hinterland.
Sunday’s event attended by Ministers of Government, the diplomatic corps, and leading members of the private sector, is the first of a series of fundraisers which have been organized by the Office of the First Lady.
At right, First lady Arya Ali and Minister of Education, Priya Manickchand.
The affair follows the First Lady‘s January launch of her Menstrual Hygiene Initiative which seeks to end period poverty by making sanitary pads accessible to women and girls for free.
Given the magnitude of such an undertaking, the First Lady has decided that project will be rolled out in phases, beginning with the provision of sanitary pads to the most vulnerable—girls in the hinterland communities are set to benefit.
“The gravity of this problem was highlighted in a casual conversation I had with a stranger who pointed out that girls were forced to skip school routinely, and in some instances drop out permanently, because they could not afford sanitary products. This is unacceptable. No girl should be placed in a situation in which she is forced to absent from or quit school because of her inability to afford sanitary products,” Mrs. Ali told the donors at Sunday’s event.
She noted that period poverty deprives girls of the very education which they need to grasp economic and other opportunities, while highlighting that it can result in harmful psychological effects such as impaired cognitive skills and social isolation.
To bring an end to this undesirable plight, the First Lady believes that there must first be an end to the denial of period poverty, after which conversations around women’s health must be normalized, even in spaces occupied only by men.
“We must also disabuse ourselves of the idea that menstruation is exclusively a female concern. It is not. It is a concern for all because when girls are deprived of education and economic opportunities as a result of period poverty, it is the entire society which is affected, not just women,” she said.
She said that everyone – civil society, government, and the private sector – has a responsibility to that every single woman and girl benefit from safe and hygienic menstrual products and the dignity that this affords. As such, she lauded the efforts of the attendees who would have contributed financially, and challenged them to also raise their voices to end the stigma associated with menstruation.
Speaking at the event Minister of Education, Priya Manickchand lauded the First Lady for beginning what she hopes will be a national conversation with effective solutions.
Minister Manickchand is working closely with the Office of the First Lady to have the sanitary pads distributed to girls via the public schools and reflected on the taboo nature of the conversation in and around period and menstrual health. She announced that the Education Ministry will begin research to determine the impact of period and period poverty on education.
“The Ministry will continue to support efforts which are aimed at ending period poverty and ensuring our girls and women have equal access to educational and other opportunities” the Minister said.
The event was sponsored by DeSinco Trading, Muneshwers, Impressions Branding, The Wine Vault, Reminiscence Guyana, Star Party Rentals, New Thriving Restaurant, NAJAB’s Trading, Hard Rock, Kirk Noel, Gaitri Byropersaud, RS53 Restaurant, Leanne Cakes, Tootie Fruity, Oasis Café, Fab Cakes and Cupcakes, Beauty Blossoms, Kurt Campbell, and Rhea Austin.