U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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TURNING PERIOD POVERTY FROM STRUGGLE TO STRENGTH

February 23, 2026

By Firdaus Bashee – Country Director, USCRI Kenya and, Sudi Omar Noor Founder, Girl Power Action Initiative (GPAI)

 

In Kakuma, thousands of girls deal with the reality of not having access to sanitary pads each month. This includes over 75,000 vulnerable teenage mothers, survivors of gender-based violence (GBV), and school-aged girls who are most affected by period poverty and economic exclusion. Girls use rags, tissues, old garments, or nothing at all, when supplies run out. Many even skip school out of concern that their uniforms will get stained or that their peers will make fun of them.

 

In the Wake of Aid Cuts

At the same time, overall conditions in Kakuma are dire, as the camp is in the middle of a man-made humanitarian crisis. During a recent visit of a USCRI delegation from the United States and Nairobi, it was clear that conditions were even worse than the prior visit; starvation has worsened, and the cuts in funding were clear everywhere we looked. Witnessing people barely survive on a cup of rice for lunch and a cup of sorghum for dinner is an image that never leaves you.

The impact of aid cuts is not limited to not having enough food. Menstrual hygiene is among the first areas to suffer as humanitarian assistance falls short. Women and girls who are already marginalized are made even more vulnerable. It also raises protection concerns, since some girls resort to risky strategies, such as transactional relationships, to obtain pads when their basic needs are not met.

And yet, even in all this pain, we see a light at the end of the tunnel. That light comes from refugee girls and young women at Girl Power Action Initiative (GPAI) who are proving that, when given a chance, they can transform their reality.

 

GPAI and USCRI Strive for Menstrual Justice

GPAI and USCRI believe that, together, we can address these issues in a sustainable manner by blending skills-based employment with menstrual hygiene solutions. Together, we are excited to launch the Keep Girls Dreaming pilot program, which will empower foster girls and their caretakers in Kakuma.

Through our partnership, we will:

  • Teach women and girls how to sew and make clothing, especially reusable sanitary pads.
  • Create a center for producing reusable sanitary pads.

Our collaboration aims to reduce period poverty and champions of menstrual justice. It goes beyond simply producing pads. Participants will become financially independent while offering vital menstrual hygiene solutions to their communities by acquiring marketable skills and manufacturing reusable pads, all while pushing forward environmentally friendly, long-term results that put refugee-led initiatives at the center. This is one step of many needed to achieve menstrual justice in Kakuma.

 

Our Joint Vision

Thanks to our generous donors’ support, we are adopting an approach that combines economic empowerment, education, and dignity, guaranteeing that no girl needs to skip school or experience embarrassment due to her period.

Our goal is to transform obstacles into opportunities. Period poverty is not inevitable; one pad, one skill, and one empowered girl at a time, we can change lives with the correct resources, mentoring, and support.

Join us in giving these girls and young women the chance to survive, rebuild, and lead better lives in Kakuma.

 

GPAI is a refugee- and women-led community-based organization (CBO) operating in Kakuma Refugee Camp & Kalobeyei Integrated Settlement in Kenya since we were founded in 2021. 

We are women and girls from the refugee and host community who live the reality of forced displacement every day. From the pressure of shrinking aid, the shame around menstruation, the vulnerability of dependency, the silence around gender-based violence (GBV), and the struggle to meet daily basic needs with dignity. GPAI exists to end the silence, shame, isolation, and dependency that hold our sisters back. We organize, teach, produce, and protect one another so that women and girls can live with dignity, safety, and self-reliance.

 

So far, we have impacted the lives of 12,000+ women and girls through the Keep Girls Dreaming initiative. Click here to learn how to help girls in Kakuma achieve their dreams.

 

 

 


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