2459 Donors

213 Fundraisers

$375,000 Goal

$334,547.22 Total Raised

Go to Sofía Nordlund

Sofía Nordlund

Text PADPROJECT51 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Morgane Delorme

Morgane Delorme

Text PADPROJECT53 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$61.53
Donors
2
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Jennifer Zhou

Jennifer Zhou

Text PADPROJECT54 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Leena Butler

Leena Butler

Text PADPROJECT55 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$5,000
Go to Olivia Puri Negri

Olivia Puri Negri

Text PADPROJECT57 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Judy Taback

Judy Taback

Text PADPROJECT59 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$155
Donors
3
Goal Amount
$500
Go to Diya Shrivastava

Diya Shrivastava

Text PADPROJECT61 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Swati Raghuvanshi

Swati Raghuvanshi

Text PADPROJECT62 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Shannara Fernando

Shannara Fernando

Text PADPROJECT63 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$175
Go to Morgan McGill

Morgan McGill

Text PADPROJECT64 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Rene Veronica

Rene Veronica

Text PADPROJECT68 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$150
Go to Juneida Khodabocus

Juneida Khodabocus

Text PADPROJECT70 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$1,032.17
Donors
41
Goal Amount
$306
Go to Mauimountainmamma Onmaui

Mauimountainmamma Onmaui

Text PADPROJECT71 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$20
Donors
1
Goal Amount
$1,000
Go to Jasmine Justensen

Jasmine Justensen

Text PADPROJECT72 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to MISS MARIAM CHEEMA

MISS MARIAM CHEEMA

Text PADPROJECT73 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$62.52
Donors
4
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Ilse Rivera

Ilse Rivera

Text PADPROJECT74 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Bhumika Dubay

Bhumika Dubay

Text PADPROJECT75 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Giovana Rodrigues

Giovana Rodrigues

Text PADPROJECT76 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Rashmi Bhatt

Rashmi Bhatt

Text PADPROJECT77 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$151.28
Donors
2
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Nessma Mohdy

Nessma Mohdy

Text PADPROJECT78 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to DU Panhellenic

DU Panhellenic

Text PADPROJECT79 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$500
Go to Amanda Ryvkin

Amanda Ryvkin

Text PADPROJECT80 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$10.25
Donors
1
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Jasmine Morales

Jasmine Morales

Text PADPROJECT84 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$5.12
Donors
1
Goal Amount
$180
Go to Olivia Viny

Olivia Viny

Text PADPROJECT86 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Andrea Gruber

Andrea Gruber

Text PADPROJECT87 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$20,315.09
Donors
29
Goal Amount
$43,500
Go to Flor Castaneda

Flor Castaneda

Text PADPROJECT90 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$92.30
Donors
3
Goal Amount
$5,000
Go to Kavita Bisht

Kavita Bisht

Text PADPROJECT91 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$0
Donors
0
Goal Amount
$50
Go to Hannah Mitchell

Hannah Mitchell

Text PADPROJECT99 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$64.64
Donors
3
Goal Amount
$200
Go to Martina Rossi

Martina Rossi

Text PADPROJECT100 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$25.64
Donors
1
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Miura Lima

Miura Lima

Text PADPROJECT103 to 71777 to donate
Total Raised
$460.59
Donors
17
Goal Amount
$250
Go to Sofía Nordlund

Sofía Nordlund

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Morgane Delorme

Morgane Delorme

Un appel à mes amis et mes proches, Joignez vous à moi pour une bonne cause en donnant et soutenant "The Pad Project" dans la lutte pour l'égalité menstruelle ! Une notion peu connue qui renvoie aux inégalités vécues dans ce monde face aux ressources et à l'éducation données aux femmes par rapport à leurs menstruations. The Pad Project est une OBNL qui vise à soutenir les jeunes filles du monde entier, mais particulièrement des régions les moins développées et les moins sensibilisées, dans l'accès à des protections féminines, leur permettant de poursuivre une éducation et ainsi de participer au développement de leur communauté. Voici un rapide historique du projet pour mieux comprendre son but : Lors de la «Commission de la condition de la femme» de 2013 aux Nations Unies, un groupe d'élèves du secondaire et leur enseignante, Melissa Berton, ont appris que les filles du monde entier sont obligées d'abandonner l'école entièrement au début de leurs règles, en raison du manque d'accès à des fournitures menstruelles hygiéniques et abordables. Melissa et ses élèves se sont engagés à créer un documentaire qui sensibiliserait à la question et à former un club appelé The Pad Project. Six ans plus tard, en 2019, ce film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., A remporté l'Academy Award du meilleur court métrage documentaire. Grâce au soutien de personnes attentionnées comme vous, The Pad Project a eu un retour de 42 États, 94 pays, et a déclenché une conversation mondiale sur les menstruations. Pourtant, alors que The Pad Project est reconnaissant par toute l'aide qu'ils ont reçue, la lutte pour l'égalité menstruelle ne fait que commencer! Afin de vous donner une idée de l'importance du travail qu'il reste à faire, je vous invite aussi à regarder le court documentaire "Period.End of sentence" disponible sur Netflix. Réaliste et touchant, il vous permettra de connaitre la réalité d'un grand nombre de femmes ! En attendant, je compte sur vous pour les dons ! Morgane

Total Raised
$61.53
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Jennifer Zhou

Jennifer Zhou

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you. Jennifer

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Leena Butler

Leena Butler

Dear Friends and Family, DearIt Truly breaks my heart and beggars belief that young girls & women have to live in the dark ages, with shame and fear and taboos attached to a natural age old life giving cycle. Their period! We as women, their sisters can help; we can assist in overcoming stigma and help get them some safe supplies, coupled with creating work and income for them as well; engender Pride that they have value, contributing to their family. In the process of making these vital women's products they will learn why and what a period is/does, removing fear, & have safe, affordable & hygienic products. Engender self Pride;that they have value, are contributing to their family, village and society. Imagine yourself or your daughters having no pads, having to use dirty ol rags and stopping school because they've reached puberty Please join me in this. They can't do it without you. [Name]LEENA [Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$5,000
Go to Olivia Puri Negri

Olivia Puri Negri

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Judy Taback

Judy Taback

Dear Friends and Family, My granddaughter Claire co-founded The Pad Project almost 8 years ago when she was 13 years old. The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." For my 80th birthday it would be my fondest wish to help her organization continue the wonderful work that they do both here in the United States and around the world. At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, Claire learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. She and her peers committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. My hope is that you will support Claire’s efforts and continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you! All my love, Judy

Total Raised
$155
Goal Amount
$500
Go to Diya Shrivastava

Diya Shrivastava

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Swati Raghuvanshi

Swati Raghuvanshi

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Shannara Fernando

Shannara Fernando

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you. Thank you, Shannara Fernando

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$175
Go to Morgan McGill

Morgan McGill

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you. Morgan McGill

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Rene Veronica

Rene Veronica

Queridos amigos y familiares, Por favor, únanse a mí y a The Pad Project en la lucha global por la igualdad menstrual. The Pad Project es una organización sin fines de lucro dedicada al principio de que, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." En la "Comisión de la Condición Jurídica y Social de la Mujer" de 2013 en las Naciones Unidas, un grupo de estudiantes de secundaria y su maestra, Melissa Berton, aprendieron que las niñas de todo el mundo se ven obligadas a faltar a la escuela o a abandonarla por completo al comienzo de sus períodos, debido a la falta de acceso a suministros menstruales higiénicos y asequibles. Melissa y sus estudiantes se comprometieron a crear un documental que concienciara sobre el tema y a formar un club llamado The Pad Project. Seis años después, en 2019, esa película, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE, ganó el premio de la Academia al mejor corto documental, y ese club se convirtió en la organización sin fines de lucro 501(c)3 sobre la que les escribo hoy. Gracias al apoyo de personas como tu, The Pad Project ha tenido el placer de ser escuchado en 42 estados de Los Estados Unidos, 94 países, y ha provocado una conversación global sobre la menstruación. Aún así, aunque The Pad Project se siente honrado por toda la ayuda que ha recibido, ¡la lucha por la igualdad menstrual no ha hecho más que empezar! Mi esperanza es que continúen promoviendo sus objetivos al desmantelar los tabúes en torno a la menstruación, crear su propio capítulo del Proyecto de Almohadillas y hacer una donación a su organización. Por favor, ayúdenlos a llegar a los 50 estados, 195 países, y a potenciar a más niñas y mujeres! No pueden hacerlo sin ti. René Verónica.

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$150
Go to Juneida Khodabocus

Juneida Khodabocus

A woman will have a period usually every 21 to 40 days, lasting around 2 to 7 days, from an average age of 13 till 51, corresponding to almost 450 periods during her lifetime, and equivalent to spending up to 10 years of her life having her menses. Should she thus be able to perform all her usual daily activities including going to school or work while she is on her period? To me, the answer is obvious - an absolute yes! Sadly, this is far from being the case in certain countries around the world. Despite being in the 21st century, the disparity between the developed and developing world is striking. A female teenager in London, for example, would usually be well aware of the concept of menstruation as being a natural process of life; she normally has access to any form of sanitary pads/tampons/menstrual cups and she will typically still be able to go to school while she is on her period. Conversely, in rural India, that same female teenager could grow up with the concept that a monthly bleed is synonymous to an illness or worse, an impurity and thus the need to stay away from the household. She mostly relies on old, often, dirty pieces of cloth to use as pads, potentially increasing her risk of pelvic infection and later infertility. Due to the fear of any leakage or nowhere to change her “cloths”, she has to stay at home when she is on her period and miss out on education, - her only sustainable way of climbing the social ladder. Additionally, later in life after having a few kids, a woman can feel so crippled by her period that she would resort to having a hysterectomy to end it all, often entailing other surgical complications. In short, in many parts of the world, a period, regrettably, remains an absolute taboo. In light of the above, as a female gynaecologist trainee with ancestral roots from the developing world but living and working in the developed world, I strongly feel that action needs to be taken against this double standard. Hence, I am hoping to use my upcoming birthday (30th June) as an opportunity to raise money to be able to make a difference in these girls’ lives. I would be genuinely honoured if you could help me in this endeavour. As a fundraising initiative, I will also be baking some cakes/cupcakes (you are welcome to check my baking page @jakbakes on Instagram for an idea of the treats) :) “You might not be able to change the world, but you could change someone’s world!” A period should end a sentence, not an education. – The Pad Project https://thepadproject.org/who-we-are/ Watch the short film on Netflix: Period. End of sentence. Please write "June's Birthday" in the comments IF you donate Thanks for reading and contributing. May you be blessed always! JuN3

Total Raised
$1,032.17
Goal Amount
$306
Go to Mauimountainmamma Onmaui

Mauimountainmamma Onmaui

Dear Friends and Family, It's all about perspective... Can you imagine not having access to affordable supplies for your period? Forcing you to stay home from school and feeling shamed and dirty? That today, in 2020 even talking about menstruation in some countries is still considered taboo? With monies raised these women can get their own machine to make pads!. They create jobs, allow them to stay in school and feel empowered, contributing to their families financially. Check out the short film "Period. End of Sentence" to see how it works. Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! Cybil

Total Raised
$20
Goal Amount
$1,000
Go to Jasmine Justensen

Jasmine Justensen

Eight key facts on menstruation: On average a woman menstruates for about 7 years during their lifetime. The first period can be met with either celebration, fear or concern. For every girl, this signifies an important transition to womanhood - a time when they would benefit from the support of family and friends. Many girls do not have complete and accurate understanding of menstruation as a normal biological process. Educating girls before their first period -- and, importantly, boys -- on menstruation, builds their confidence, contributes to social solidarity and encourages healthy habits. Such information should be provided at home and at school. Poor menstrual hygiene can pose physical health risks and has been linked to reproductive and urinary tract infections.[ii] [iii] Many girls and women have limited options for affordable menstrual materials. Providing access to private facilities with water and safer low-cost menstrual materials could reduce urogenital diseases.[iv] Girls and women with disabilities and special needs face additional challenges with menstrual hygiene and are affected disproportionately with lack of access to toilets with water and materials to manage their period. Many women and girls do not have access to materials to manage their menstruation, especially in times of emergency -- natural disasters and conflicts. In emergencies, UNICEF provides dignity kits to women and girls, which include sanitary pads, a flashlight and whistle for personal safety when using the toilet. Globally, 2.3 billion people lack basic sanitation services and in Least Developed Countries only 27 per cent of the population has a handwashing facility with water and soap at home. Managing periods at home is a major challenge for women and adolescent girls who lack these basic facilities at home. About half of the schools in low-income countries lack adequate drinking water, sanitation and hygiene crucial for girls and female teachers to manage their period. Inadequate facilities can affect girls’ experience at school, causing them to miss school during their period. All schools should provide running water, safe and clean toilets for adolescent girls. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you. If you have taken the time to read through this please consider donating as well. My goal is $100 for the first donation. Thank you.

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to MISS MARIAM CHEEMA

MISS MARIAM CHEEMA

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you. Mariam

Total Raised
$62.52
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Ilse Rivera

Ilse Rivera

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Bhumika Dubay

Bhumika Dubay

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to creating a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE. won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you! Bhumika

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Giovana Rodrigues

Giovana Rodrigues

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Rashmi Bhatt

Rashmi Bhatt

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$151.28
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Nessma Mohdy

Nessma Mohdy

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to DU Panhellenic

DU Panhellenic

Hello Panhel! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you. DU Panhellenic

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$500
Go to Amanda Ryvkin

Amanda Ryvkin

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$10.25
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Jasmine Morales

Jasmine Morales

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.

Total Raised
$5.12
Goal Amount
$180
Go to Olivia Viny

Olivia Viny

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Andrea Gruber

Andrea Gruber

Remember when you were in middle and high school and nothing would have mortified you more than the thought of having a blood stain on your pants that everyone could see? Remember when you first started paying for your own tampons and pads? It turned out they were way more expensive than you thought. Plus you always had to have a whole supply of kinds including super plus, plus, overnight, regular, light, liners, tampons and pads. You often had to carry supplies with you just in case it showed up at the worst possible time. God forbid that anyone knows you have your period. The fear of bleeding through your clothes stays with you even as an adult. But what if you didn't have pads or tampons at all? What if you couldn't go anywhere or do anything because you had no barrier between your blood and the world? The best you could do is possibly some rags... For many women in the developing world, this is the case. Inadequate access to sanitary products, toilets, running water, etc. cause many girls to drop out of school. More alarming, for me, are the inhumane menstrual traditions that still exist in some countries. Many aren’t based on religion, but rather on long standing regional traditions. They range from the merely humiliating to the dangerous. Women can be forced to live in unsafe conditions outside, away from family, because of their “impurity.” They must stay in this shed during the day to avoid accidentally touching a plant or animal and destroying it. But we can help. I am so grateful to have been chosen as one of a hundred international ambassadors to spread the word about an amazing foundation, The Pad Project. I am asking you to please watch Period. End of Sentence. on Netflix, the Academy Award winning short documentary about the needs of these women,The Pad Project AND what we can all do to help. My goal of $43,500 is based on the cost of setting up one automated pad machine as well as materials and paid labor for a year. Packaging and distribution will employ 8-10 women. Automated Pad Machine (for Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka) ● Pads Produced: 80,000 to 100,000 pads per month (1 million pads per year)● People Served: 8,000 to 10,000 menstruators per month● Pad Machine, Accessories, and Toolkit: $30,000 USD● Raw Materials: $10,000 USD for 400,000 pads● Training and Operations $3,500 USD● Grand Total: $43,500 USD (travel costs, taxes, insurance, taxes, etc. not included) Subsequent years will be much less expensive, mostly labor and raw materials. I like to think of it as “The Million Pad March.” Even when COVID keeps us at home, we can all still do something to educate and empower other women all over the world. Thanks for your help and I will keep you posted on how we are doing! Andrea Any questions? Want to help more? Contact me at andreagruber23 @gmail.com

Total Raised
$20,315.09
Goal Amount
$43,500
Go to Flor Castaneda

Flor Castaneda

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you. Flor Castaneda

Total Raised
$92.30
Goal Amount
$5,000
Go to Kavita Bisht

Kavita Bisht

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.[Name]

Total Raised
$0
Goal Amount
$50
Go to Hannah Mitchell

Hannah Mitchell

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you. Hannah

Total Raised
$64.64
Goal Amount
$200
Go to Martina Rossi

Martina Rossi

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.Martina

Total Raised
$25.64
Goal Amount
$100
Go to Miura Lima

Miura Lima

Dear Friends and Family,Please join me and The Pad Project in the global fight for menstrual equality! The Pad Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the principle that, "A period should end a sentence, not a girl's education." At the 2013 “Commission on the Status of Women” at the United Nations, a group of high school students and their teacher, Melissa Berton, learned that girls all over the world are forced to miss or drop out of school entirely at the onset of their periods, due to lack of access to hygienic and affordable menstrual supplies. Melissa and her students committed to create a documentary that would raise awareness about the issue and to form a club called The Pad Project. Six years later, in 2019, that film, PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE., won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and that club became the 501(c)3 nonprofit that I write to you about today. Thanks to the support of caring people like you, The Pad Project has had the pleasure of hearing from 42 states, 94 countries, and has sparked a global conversation about menstruation. Still, while The Pad Project is humbled by all of the help they have received, the fight for menstrual equality has only just begun! My hope is that you will continue to further their goals by dismantling taboos around menstruation, creating your own Pad Project chapter, and donating to their organization. Please help them reach all 50 states, 195 countries, and empower more girls and women! They can't do it without you.Miura Lima

Total Raised
$460.59
Goal Amount
$250