Photo Gallery: Hygiene Project
Dinka women learn Bible stories while sewing feminine hygiene cloths in Southern Sudan.
IMB missionary Laura C. teaches Dinka women to create homemade sanitary products (called feminine cloths) at a church training in Rumbeck, Sudan.
In Southern Sudan, females do not have access to feminine hygiene products. They sit on the ground during their menstrual cycles, then cover the blood with dirt. Some also use layers of underwear to hide the blood.
“We missed lessons in school because of bleeding,” says 17-year-old Mary Apande. “Now [through the use of feminine cloths] I am able to do everything, and when I am bleeding others can not see it.”
Laura C. and some student volunteers cut pieces of cloth that can be used to make feminine cloths. Baptist Global Response provided $6,500 for 880 school girls to have enough materials to make two feminine cloths each.
IMB missionary Jamie E. teaches Dinka women to sew feminine cloths. Jamie E. and Laura C. originally trained 880 school girls to make the cloths, and now they are training groups of women at churches.
A Dinka woman sews together a feminine cloth during a church training in Rumbeck, Sudan. While training, Jamie E. and Laura C. also teach Bible stories, such as the story of the woman with a bleeding problem who was healed by Jesus.
A Dinka woman giggles as Jamie E. and Laura C. demonstrate how the feminine cloth is to be worn.
Laura C. teaches a Bible study with a group of primary school girls she met through the feminine hygiene project.
Jamie E. (center) and Laura C. (far right) meet with girls for a weekly Bible study that began after a feminine cloth training in their school.
Girls listen to a weekly Bible study that began after a feminine cloth training in their school. Out of the seven schools where trainings were held, two schools asked Jamie E. and Laura C. to return each week to teach a Bible study.













