Paradoxes often hold the key with which to unlock the real nature of things. One recent incident, much in the headlines, would suffice to illustrate this: the protests over the outlawing of the age (and hence menstruation) taboo in Sabarimala. One of the most strikingly odd things in those pictures was the number of orthodox women who protested in favour of the taboo. It seems anomalous or even incoherent, at least on the surface, because they are the subject-victims of the taboo. And grumbling about being excluded Âduring the 바카라˜curse바카라™ is one of the staples of female bonÂding across castes and classes. This is more so in societies like India where this most normal higher-Âmammalian occurrence is treated as a polluted, Âuntouchable, shameful state. Why would women want to hug their chains?
The answer perhaps lies in human history. A good place to start is the differing view of women바카라™s bodies between matriarchy and patriarchy, and the scarred zone of many battles in between. Both attitudes exist uneasily with the mobility and vocÂational freedom given to women in today바카라™s globalising, multicultural society. The crux of the conflict Âbetween the two is this question: Is menstruation a sacred state (matriarchy) or a shameful one (patriarchy)? Women are avoided in both states, but for different reasons. And the question of entry to temples occupies a curious position in these two approaches.
Etymologically, the word taboo entered the English language through Captain Cook: he encountered it in Polynesia as 바카라˜tapua바카라™, which meant both 바카라˜sacred바카라™ and 바카라˜menstruation바카라™. Was menstruation the original experience through which, as hunter-gatherers moved to modern human consciousness, the very idea of the forbidden evolved?
Also, this etymological root implies that menstruation was both sacred and forbidden (the latter being the common meaning of taboo now). Cultures close to their indigenous origins, including India바카라™s tribes, or those practising matriarchy, still see it as a sacred, power-Âbestowing thing. Indeed, in prehistory, it was said to be the focus of an empowerment ritual that, in matriarchies, became a source of fear to men. Anthropologist Chris Knight has argued that, in matriarchies, the treatment of this natural Âbiological phenomenon was very Âempowering and Âadvantageous to women. Female-led ideologies Âcreated their own taboo. Since, as Freud said, blood scared men, who associated it with the hunt of wild animals, the state was used to distance men, and thus curtail predator sexuality.


Venus of Willendorf, female fertility idol dating back to 30,000 BC
At the same time, even in societies that were not technically matriarchal, like hunter-gatherer societies, the period set women바카라™s bodies off as empowered and Âsacred. The hunt was synchronised to coincide with women바카라™s periods and, Âbecause of the old correspondence of periods with lunar phases, this was also often associated with the idea of using the full moon and the light it provided to provide food. Also, that this energy was possible due to the men바카라™s sexual banishment from women. That is, both in hunting societies and in matriarchies, menstruation was used to assert women바카라™s mystical control and synchrony with processes of nature, to frighten men, keep them occupied in providing food, keep them away. An anthropologist has called it the sex strike.
Ironically, in all traditional post-farming and settled Âsocieties, this process was totally coopted by patriarchy. Romans, Christians, Jews, Muslims, all believed in some sort of taboo. Common to all is also a confusion: it is sacred, in that it marks a state of in-betweenness, like death and childbirth, and yet all of these are also polluted states. Most societies do see it as a biological rite of passage, but one where women must be kept hidden. How did patriarchy so stigmatise menstruation?
The answer is a complex one, and we could speculate that it has to do with the shifting balance of power as human societies moved on from hunting, and female perÂiodic bodily synchronicity in cycles became more diffuse, affecting solidarity and empowerment. (The etymological trail remains, linking both 바카라˜menses바카라™ and 바카라˜month바카라™ to the moon. See Sara Read바카라™s Menses: A Medical History in Fatuity for theories about menstruation in the history of medicine.) Territorial wars might have placed women in vulnerable positions바카라”there was a fear of blood as societies became more 바카라˜civilised바카라™ and less connected to the 바카라˜hunt바카라™. The taboo developed differently and at different times in various societies as they settled into patriarchy. In India, no doubt the coexistence of Âindigenous, more natural, tribal ways and the developing hierarchies of the caste system played a role.
For, scattered all over Âtraditional India (as in many other parts of the world) are varying Âtaboos surrounding Âmenstruation. Seclusion, forbidden temple entry, prohibition of contact with food for fear of spoiling it, general pollution, and so on. Most religions바카라”Judaism, Christianity, Islam바카라”associate some sort of contagion with it, believing it could spoil food, wine and pickles, although it was proved scientifically in the 1950s that it contained no toxins .


Tribes and those of other heterodox traditions conduct ceremonies when a girl attains puberty. This is, of course, more embarrassing than celebratory for the girl. However, the 바카라˜higher바카라™ the caste, the greater the taboo. That, here, patriarchy controls the gender/biological roles is quite clear바카라”studies have shown that the degree of seclusion is always closely tied to the sepaÂration of males from domÂestic duties (it바카라™s other women who fill in), even though it is sometimes rightly claimed that seclusion and separation during the three days also liberate women from household chores. Still, the taboo went with families where men Âassumed obvious patriarchal roles and was part of intense gender socialisation.
The ironic aspect in more privileged-caste families, though, is that while men routinely broke taboo barriers in their sexual lives, it was women who were deemed the ultimate agents of pollution. In village India in the past, menstruating women were deemed the agents of pollution, along with Dalits. A subcaste바카라™s lines were compromised by impure behaviours. 바카라˜Madi바카라™, a state of ritual purity needed for worship and preparing food, was observed by orthodox housewives. The 바카라˜out of doors바카라™ woman was the Âantithesis of the 바카라˜madi바카라™ woman. A group was valued more if it executed bodily repÂressions and Âpunishments, like widow tonsure or diet restrictions, on its women.
Anthropologist Louis Dumont has spoken of Âhierarchy as an important principle in caste that has survived, even thrived, in modernity. Ideas about gender form an equally enduring mechanism of power. Even as India modernised, women retained their symbolic position as temptresses or polluters in the sacred space바카라”in myths, apsÂaras always tempt sages바카라”or as weak, vulnerable points in caste survival. With Hindutva, it is easy to see why these aspects are Âincreasingly asserted.
India is, however, a particularly interesting case, for it contains a blend of matriarchal as well as patriarchal attÂitudes. But while the latter treats women as polluted and inferior, the former traditions see it as a source of sacred power to keep men at bay. Both, however, mystify an experience that is best treated as a normal biological occurrence. All across the board in traditional India, from orthodox Hindus in the South to indigenous tribes, the taboo is still observed. Urban centres vary in their responses. Where it is obsÂerved in an orthodox manner, with seclusion, the following is what a growing girl might experience.
Seclusion, of course, is only the tip of the iceberg of embarrassment, shame and secrecy that shrouds the monthly experience for all women. Children see it first in the sudden disappearance of mothers or aunts into a room in the terrace or an outhouse. Children watch their mothers바카라™ strict aloofness from household duties, as if suddenly they had been turned into social outcasts. I remember being bewildered, on holidays in south India, at how sudden but how complete it was! It could be mid-day or late evening: in the midst of family togetherness, the mother or aunt would sheepishly retire to the ÂsecÂluded room. The child would feel bereft바카라”or eventually, even relief!바카라”knowing that the mother would be inaccessible for the next three days. Of course the cause could not be expÂlained to a child, so it remÂained mysterious. Then, three days later, they retÂurned to join the fold, in clean clothes, bright smiles, the bindi restored, with combed and oiled hair.
For a child, this is at first intriguing. I remember thinking, as a child of six, when the biology of it had not yet been explained to me, that it was some sort of genie that entered the women in my grandparents바카라™ household and left them after three days. As it turned out, my childhood speculation was not that far off the ideas contained in mythic lore. The Bhagavata Purana says Kali바카라™s presence in menstrual blood is what causes the dangerous power that should be locked up, lest it harms men!


A sanitary napkin ad
As young girls move through life, those three days move from the realm of the mysÂterious to the shameful. Young girls in cities, if privileged, might learn about it in a biology class or from their mothers, and be equipped with the Âinstructions to deal with it, but in many places girls stop attÂending school due to lack of sanitation facilities. It is ironic that a condition that is the focus of so much Ânegative attention is still not Âconsidered important enough for the State to Âallocate facilities. For, taboo or not, it바카라™s not an easy change for a young girl to navigate even physiologically. Even with access to water or sanitary aids (whose spread is fairly limited바카라¦see Sinu Joseph바카라™s Miss Third World, I Presume for a counter-view), a young girl of 10 or 12 is Âbewildered by the sudden occurrence, but all she is Âoffered is shame. In my Catholic schools, when a girl바카라™s clothes were stained, the girl went into hysterics, the nuns gave her lectures on being prepared바카라¦all hell broke loose. The rest of us watched in horror or shame, hoping such a thing would never happen to us. The fear of the stain itself stains Âfemale adolescence.
The next hurdle is women바카라™s spiritual or religious personhood. Traditional India steÂeps women in mythologies and cosmic awareness, empÂhasises a spiritual life, and assÂerts the powerful presence of female gods. Yet, how are women meant to traverse this realm? With their power leashed in a regÂime of control. Temples forbid women on the 바카라˜polluting바카라™ days. In special temples like Sabarimala, the god Ayyappa is celibate and a renunciate, so women at any stage of the month, not just the 바카라˜impure바카라™, would distract him. Imagine a young 12-ÂyearÂ-old going on a pilgrimage with her family and being told that she is ÂexcÂluded from a temple Âbecause she is suddenly ÂuncÂlean. She is then to see herself as either a seductress, who might distract or pollÂute the god, or as a person incaÂpable of a spiritÂual life in the only terms she knows, as a temple worshipper.
But in this exclusion, an awareness develops. Even today, in orthodox households, while there is a secret bonding among women in this shared oppressive seclusion, it takes a toll on girls바카라™ self-confidence. The psychic burden makes it intolerable. Women in modern urban sectors might not face seclusion, but neither do they ÂrecÂeive any medical help or couÂnselling to deal with the mood swings, the hormonal and concomitant emotional changes that do occur.


Menstrual art by Jen Lewis
The main reason why we should upturn all of this is twofold. The menstÂrual taboo, whether for sacred or profane reasons, in either a matriarchal or a patÂriarchal mindset, is an example of biological essentialism that we must move beyond. The essentialism defines woman only by her biology. To glorify women for the occÂurrence of menstruation or to revile them for it is to persist in a mystification of the female reproductive function. Women are thinkers, sportswomen, cooks, scientists, Âengineers, writers. MensÂtruation should be treated as a routine cyclical event, a health issue to be navigated like any other, divesÂted of myth, ritual and shame. Women must be helped in the psychological and hormÂonal trials of growing up to reach full selfhood.
Finally, in both matriarchies and patriarchies, the idea that men are the vulnerable sex to be protected eitÂher from the sacred or the shameful aspects of menstruation (no matter what toll it takes on the female psyche) is the real problem바카라”and profoundly ironic considering the violence men inflict on women. Men should stop punishing women for their own weakness. Scapegoating a natural, biological female state as polluted, while men engage in all sorts of truly transgressive, taboo activities, highlights the irony. The ÂortÂhodox condoned a double standard바카라”through devadasi exploitation, it sanctioned a virtual polygamy, an institutionalised sexual prison for women from the poorer castes. This ritualised male infidelity went unpunished. And this double standard exiÂsted even as men claimed spiritual ÂsupÂeriority and the right to pilgrimage, while women were meant to retreat in shame to the outhouse, three days every month.
(Nalini Natarajan is the Âauthor of The Unsafe Sex)