In the quiet corners of Kitgum District, a quiet revolution is unfolding, one stitch at a time. At the heart of it is a simple but powerful truth: when girls have access to sanitary wear, they stay in school, dream bigger, and shape their futures.
Across Africa, one in five school-age girls misses class or drops out entirely due to the inability to manage menstruation safely and with dignity. The statistics are sobering, but the story behind them is even more urgent. Menstruation, a natural biological process, becomes a barrier to education when girls lack access to menstrual products, clean facilities, and supportive environments.
“Menstruation should never be a reason for a girl to miss school,” says Akullo Betty, founder of WORUDET. “Yet for many girls in rural Uganda, it is. We see bright, ambitious girls forced to stay home, fall behind, and eventually drop out, not because they lack ability, but because they lack pads.”
This is not just a health issue … it’s a human rights issue. UNESCO reports that menstrual hygiene management is directly linked to school attendance, academic performance, and long-term empowerment. Without access to sanitary wear, girls are denied the right to learn, to grow, and to lead.
That’s where WORUDET’s tailoring club comes in. With donated fabric, sewing machines, and community support, local women and youth are producing reusable sanitary pads tailored for comfort, affordability, and sustainability. These pads are distributed in rural schools across Kitgum, accompanied by menstrual health education and open conversations that break the silence and stigma.
“Every pad we make is a promise,” says one tailoring club member. “A promise that a girl will walk into class tomorrow with confidence, not shame.”
The campaign is more than a distribution effort … it’s a movement. It’s about restoring dignity, building resilience, and ensuring that no girl is left behind because of her biology. It’s about giving girls the power to make choices about their health, their education, and their future.
Your donation, whether in the form of sanitary wear, tailoring materials, or financial support, helps fuel this movement. It helps keep girls in school. It helps them become doctors, engineers, teachers, and leaders.
Because every girl deserves more than a dream. She deserves a future.
To support the campaign or learn more, contact us.
