Girls in Barbados to receive key sanitary products through UN initiative
18 December 2023
150 girls in Barbados receive "dignity kits" with hygiene essentials and food, tackling period poverty and pandemic hardship.
18 December 2023, Bridgetown. One hundred and fifty girls at the Graydon Sealy Secondary School in Barbados will receive key sanitary products from the United Nations’ Office for the Eastern Caribbean in the form of ‘dignity kits.’
Each box contains toilet paper, soap, sanitary napkins and deodorant, as well as various non-perishable food items that will go a long way to assist girls living in small pockets of poverty on the island.
Dignity kits are distributed by UN agencies across the Eastern Caribbean to help women and girls maintain good hygiene when faced with difficult social or economic circumstances.
UN Resident Coordinator (ad interim) for Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean and UN Women Caribbean Representative Tonni Ann Brodber, said UN agencies were pleased to support children who are marginalized and vulnerable and lack access to services and resources others enjoy. She added that it was important to take provisions, like dignity kits, to those who need them.
“In our aspirations to make Barbados and the Caribbean a place where people who are born here want to stay and live here, we need to see our people and meet them where they are,” she said.
Principal of the Graydon Sealy Secondary School, Shyrelle Howard-Gittens, said the donation would go a long way to assist students whose parents, in some instances are still recovering economically from the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
She explained lack of access to basic necessities has been directly linked to how well children can perform in the classroom. In some cases, she said teachers had been “pulling their own pockets” so that children could stay in school.
“We had some children that were really struggling, and we needed to ensure that they had the scaffolding that they would need to be able to take the same exams, do the same work, benefit from the same instruction as everybody else,” Howard-Gittens explained.
“As a school, we consider ourselves a family and we support each other. So, when there’s a need...to fill, we do so, because if we don’t, our children will fall by the wayside, and we can’t afford for that to happen,” the principal added.
Education Specialist in the UNICEF Office for the Eastern Caribbean Area, Fiaz Shah, agreed that existing “pockets of poverty” have been further deepened by the pandemic. He underscored the importance of children, particularly girls, having “everyday basics” to allow them to participate fully in the school experience.
“That is why these dignity kits, which contain such items as sanitary products, underwear and soap are so useful,” Shah added.