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Campaign Spotlight: Leo Burnett India uses traditional art to break period stigma and #KeepGirlsInSchool

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MUMBAI, INDIA — Leo Burnett India has used native art to create a powerful message about the taboo of menstruation with menstrual hygiene brand Whisper.

“When I saw blood for the first time, I thought I was dying.” These are the words of a 10-year-old girl from a rural village in India who dropped out of school during the onset of puberty. Due to a lack of period information, a shocking 23 million girls drop out of school after puberty every year.

More than 70% of girls are unaware that menstruation occurs until they get their first period, and even then, the information they receive is often incorrect. In a country mired with deep-rooted cultural restrictions, so much so that even a mother doesn’t talk about period education with her daughter and neither does the school curriculum cover the subject, how does one break the proverbial glass ceiling? The answer to that lies in a systemic change by bringing accurate period information to every girl child through the most traditional platform: school textbooks.

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Menstrual hygiene brand Whisper has imparted period education to more than 40 million schoolgirls, but there’s a long way to go. This is a “Missing Chapter” in their curriculum. To really make a measurable impact and bring about a change at a micro level, we decided that if the girls don’t have access to the chapter on period education, we will take the chapter to them. Thus evolved the idea of using one of India’s oldest communication forms – ‘wall-art’ to spread period education by taking this chapter to India’s smallest towns and villages.

After identifying 28 art styles specific to the geography of each state, we worked with local artists to create custom hand-drawn paintings centered around “The Missing Chapter” on periods. Hyper-localized in 28 different languages, slogans with catchy lines were crafted to bust period myths along with a 3-step visual aid on how to use a pad. These paintings have been put up on school and village walls — a place no girl can miss seeing these. The missing chapter explains the simple biology behind periods, how to use a pad, and the importance of continuing their school education to girls. All done to help in triggering a much-needed conversation on menstruation to help #KeepGirlsInSchool.

Speaking about the campaign Rajdeepak Das, CEO & chief creative officer, South Asia, Leo Burnett said, “We believe that design and creativity can change human behavior and this is one of the biggest examples of it. The Missing Chapter that hasn’t reached millions of girls in India will now be made accessible through local art to everyone. Thousands of school and village walls have become a canvas for local artists to talk about one of the most important lessons for girls – period education. A lesson that girls can’t miss. We borrowed from culture to break cultural taboos.”

CREDITS:
CEO & Chief Creative Officer- South Asia: Rajdeepak Das
CEO & Chief Strategy Officer- South Asia: Dheeraj Sinha
National Creative Director: Sachin Kamble
Executive Creative Director: Sonal Chhajerh
Executive Vice President & Head of Digital: Niket Kumar
Associate Executive Creative Director: Gaurav Kumar
Associate Vice President Strategy: Noor Samra
Creative Director: Indrajeet Kadam
Creative Director: Tinna Rajput
Copywriter: Kaizeen Vankadia
Art Director: Nilay Chourikar
Editor: Akshay Sonawane
Associate Creative Director Digital: Deepika Baghel
Brand Services Partner: Andrea D’Souza
Brand Services Director: Purvi Bakliwal
Brand Strategy Director: Anjali Kamath

LB FILMS
Head of Films Department: Jignesh Maru
Agency Executive Producer: Anil Sonawane
Copywriter: Amit Nandwani

Partner with adobo Magazine

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