Julian Yu/ Unsplash

By Annie Banerji

NEW DELHI, May 21 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) — The Taj Mahal, built as a monument to a woman who died in childbirth, is set to get a baby feeding room in a first for India, where conservative attitudes toward public breastfeeding mean nursing mothers are often shamed and told to cover up.

Vasant Kumar Swarnkar, a top official at the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) in Agra city — home to the Taj Mahal — said the baby feeding room would be set up by July to help the "millions of mothers who visit with their babies."

A regular visitor to the 17th-century monument to eternal love, Swarnkar said he got the idea last week when he spotted a mother hiding under a staircase and struggling to breastfeed her baby despite her husband providing extra cover.

"I could see it was so difficult for her [to feed her child] which is a basic motherhood right. So I thought we have to do something," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Public breastfeeding still carries a social stigma in India where mothers are expected to be covered head-to-toe.

Last year, mothers in the eastern city of Kolkata protested outside a mall where employees told a woman to nurse her baby in a toilet and mocked her complaint.

The Taj Mahal attracts up to 8 million visitors annually. Swarnkar said he has ordered two other historical monuments in Agra to set up similar feeding rooms.

The ASI said this was the first time it was providing such a facility at any of India's 3,600-plus monuments.

Read More: What Breastfeeding Looks Like Around the World

"My hope is that more and more monuments — not only in India but around the world — replicate this [plan] so that women can feed their babies comfortably," said Swarnkar.

In 2017, the director of London's Victoria and Albert museum apologized to a mother, who was asked to cover up while breastfeeding her baby. Two years earlier, another was expelled from Spain's Corral del Carbon monument for nursing her baby.

(Reporting by Annie Banerji @anniebanerji; editing by Belinda Goldsmith. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters that covers humanitarian issues, conflicts, land and property rights, modern slavery and human trafficking, gender equality, climate change and resilience. Visit http://news.trust.org to see more stories)