It is October 2000 and I am on my way to the regional children's clinic in Korosten, a northern town in the Zhytomyr Province of Ukraine, a two-hour drive north of the provincial capital, 100 kilometers west of Chernobyl. The man who is driving us - my translator Olena and me - seems both baffled and intrigued by our destination. He can't think why anyone would go there, but I have my reasons. There is a clinic in Korosten and we are traveling Ukraine visiting clinics from Lviv on the western frontier to Dneiproprotusk on the eastern. We have finally arrived to the center region of the country, only 50 miles southwest from Chernobyl Station.
The taxi driver says there is nothing to do or see in Korosten. The city isn't even important enough to warrant a description in my Lonely Planet guidebook. It is merely a dot on a map labeled as officially outside the "affected zone" surrounding Chernobyl. We explain that we are touring the country looking for evidence of the effects Chernobyl's contamination on Ukraine over the past fifteen years. I want to find out why children of these countries are showing the long-term damage associated with increased exposure to radioactivity. They have elevated rates of up to 2500 percent in soft-tissue cancers (leukemia, thyroid cancer and tumors) and suffer from birth defects (limb deformities, spina bifida and cleft palettes) at a rate up to 100 times higher than what is considered normal.
The taxi driver looks at us and replies: "Then this is the perfect place to visit." Even though we are miles away from the Exclusion Zone around the nuclear power plant, the effects of long-term nuclear exposure are evident.




Comments
Thanks you so much for your
By Trisha Baptie, May 21, 2007 at 15:34Thanks you so much for your story.
While truly disturbing to read i think it is SO important to keep the aftermath of disasters in our minds for the lives of those affected by it are having to live usually with long term repercussions. Just recently we have had Katrina, Virgina shootings, tsunamis,911 and yet have we head much about them once the cameras turned off?
I bet it is the long term aftermath when people need the most help.It is after the story has faded and we are over saturated with information that we need to make sure we do not think that just because it is not front page anymore, things must be OK.
Virgina's victims are just starting to walk through the stages of grief, Katrina's victims are still rebuilding and trying to create new lives, orphaned tsunami children still cry themselves to sleep at night for families they will never see here on earth again.
It can be overwhelming to hear about so much tragedy all the time but i think in tragedy we can find triumph of the human spirit and that can be a beautiful story to tell.They can also hopefuly be stories in which we can learn from our mistakes and try to stop history from repeating itself.