An engineer in Telangana has sparked a growing movement against period poverty with Soukshya, an initiative that sources and distributes free sanitary pads to girls in government schools, addressing systemic gaps in menstrual hygiene support across the state. The effort comes amid a landmark Supreme Court ruling that declared menstrual health a fundamental right mandating free sanitary napkins and access to proper facilities in schools nationwide, elevating the importance of local actions like Soukshya’s on the ground.
Grassroots Action Meets Legal Reform
Soukshya began when a young engineer, moved by the sight of schoolgirls missing classes during menstruation due to lack of pads and dignity‑preserving support, decided to act rather than merely observe the problem. Through partnerships with government schools, teachers and student volunteers, the initiative now reaches hundreds of adolescent girls, supplying free sanitary pads alongside information on menstrual health and hygiene. School principals report a marked increase in attendance and confidence among girls since distribution began.
The new legal backdrop adds urgency to such local initiatives. In January 2026, India’s Supreme Court ruled that menstrual health is part of the constitutional right to life under Article 21 and ordered all states and Union Territories to ensure free sanitary napkin availability and functional gender‑segregated toilet facilities in schools. The judgement emphasised that lack of access to menstrual products creates structural barriers to education for girls.
“Girls should never have to choose between their education and their period,” said one government school teacher from Warangal district, praising the Soukshya programme’s impact on school participation rates. Officials from local education boards noted that such community efforts complement the Supreme Court’s directives by reaching girls in more remote or underserved areas where state systems have been slow to fully implement the court’s orders.
Period Poverty, Policy and Practical Gaps
Despite progressive court mandates, implementation remains uneven. While top courts have charted the legal framework for menstrual hygiene access, many schools across Telangana still lack regular supply chains for pads and adequate menstrual hygiene management (MHM) facilities, including water and private disposal systems. Independent reports and advocacy groups assert that girls in rural government schools in particular face persistent challenges, leading to absenteeism of several days each month during menstruation, a pattern that contributes to lower retention and learning outcomes.
National discussions on menstrual policy have also gained intensity. Several states have moved to allocate significant funds to supply free sanitary pads to millions of schoolgirls, a direct response to the Supreme Court’s fundamental right ruling. Advocates say these institutional commitments are essential, but not sufficient without strong monitoring and consistent delivery.
At the same time, broader debates around menstrual justice and workplace equity continue. Commentators have highlighted that while school‑focused programmes are critical, support for menstruating individuals must extend beyond classrooms including workplaces and public spaces to truly dismantle stigma and systemic barriers.
Why Local Initiatives Still Matter
Soukshya’s traction in Telangana highlights how local leadership and community partnerships can fill gaps left by larger systems. By working directly with teachers and school administrations, the initiative not only distributes products but also raises awareness among adolescents about menstrual cycles, hygiene practices and body confidence areas often neglected in formal curricula.
Volunteers and educators involved in the programme emphasise that the model which blends product access with education and dignity fosters healthier environments for girls to pursue education uninterrupted. One school coordinator noted that Soukshya provided not just sanitary pads, but also “respect and confidence,” underlining the broader psychosocial impact of breaking taboos within school cultures.
The importance of such human‑centred approaches is echoed by nationwide grassroots efforts, from zero‑waste sanitary pad projects to campaigns fostering menstrual awareness. While many of these predate recent legal reforms, they underscore a sustained community demand for dignity‑affirming hygiene support.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
Soukshya stands as a powerful reminder that meaningful change often begins with individuals choosing to act. Legal mandates like the Supreme Court’s fundamental rights verdict create the framework; community‑driven efforts bring those rights to life in everyday classrooms and communities. Yet, lasting progress requires sustained cooperation among citizens, educators, policymakers and civil society to ensure girls everywhere can stay in school with dignity and access to basic health needs.
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When one person decides to do more than notice a problem, change can begin in classrooms as well as communities.
— The Better India (@thebetterindia) March 31, 2026
An engineer in Telangana started Soukshya, a grassroots initiative that sources and distributes free sanitary pads to girls in government schools, tackling period… pic.twitter.com/N2UD8CcHiP











