Anita Diamant Sheds New Light on Menstrual Injustice

Girls need to learn that a period is natural, not shameful

Hanna Neier
Elemental

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Photo: wuestenigel/Creative Commons

In her new book, “Period. End of Sentence.” (Scribner, 2021), New York Times bestselling author and award-winning journalist Anita Diamant sheds light on the ways in which menstrual injustice threatens the education, health, and dignity of some of the world’s most vulnerable populations.

Riding the wave of the Oscar-winning documentary of the same name, the book is both eye-opening and inspiring. Through a series of essays and interviews featuring doctors, teachers, and activists, Diamant challenges the silence surrounding menstruation and highlights the organizations and everyday heroes fighting against the stigma.

Dedicating her book to the young people “making the change,” Diamant finds hope in the refusal to accept the status quo that stigmatizes menstruation. I spoke to Ms. Diamant about menstrual shaming, Indigenous period-positive traditions, and how tampon-shaped cookies can inspire a generation. This interview has been edited and condensed.

What is menstrual injustice?

It’s the injustice of living in a body that bleeds in a world that sees those bodies as less-than, worse-than, even a threat: cursed.

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