"When I started my journey as a menstrual activist, the research that young girls still felt like they were terrified when their first period came motivated me to change the disempowering narrative surrounding periods," Candice Chirwa, also known as the Minister of Menstruation in South Africa, tells Briefly.com.
"Women, girls, and menstruators deserve menstrual education as it is a normal and natural biological process that affects more than half of the world's population."
Chirwa, who says she's "always had a need to help people from a young age," says her activism and career have "transformed and cultivated my activism and career throughout the recent years."
Chirwa, who's spoken to more than 5,000 people through her nonprofit organization Qrate, says it's important for people to recognize that "something as natural as our periods can have such devastating impacts people who menstruate and it is important that we choose to be period positivewe speak openly about periods, we encourage children to speak openly about their periods so we can ensure positive experiences when young girls think about their periods."
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