| Chernobyl Children's Project International |
|
Since my return from humanitarian efforts with the Chernobyl Children’s Project International (CCPI) at the Vesnova Children’s Asylum in Belarus, this past October 2005, I’ve been asked to write about my experience. For someone who enjoys writing, this has been the most difficult experience to write about. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve started, ending a few lines later with no where to go but just to sit with the feeling and most of the time…cry. How do I write about something that has no words?...Only a feeling, so profound, attached to each memory in my heart? How do I put words to the faces and the experiences of the children and the people I’ll never forget? I’m still trying to sort these images in my head and in my heart. In the following, I attempt to share some of the salient memories – memories that fill my heart and memories that haunt my solitary thoughts. There was a lot of uncertainty about going to Belarus. I surrendered trust into the hands of the people of Chernobyl Children’s Project International, and I’d do it over and over again. We arrived in Minsk with this feeling like “We’re finally here”, but it was still nearly a four hour bus ride into the very remote village of Vesnova. This village is literally at the end of the road. It was just before midnight on October 20, 2005, and there we were. It was quiet. The next morning we were awakened by the sharp contrast to the midnight hour. Children moving through hallways, our door opening and closing – just to get a glimpse of the new arrival of volunteers. We learned early on that the lock on our door was our safeguard to securing any sense of privacy. These young people have a curiosity of everything outside the Asylum, and rightfully so they do. What did we bring? Invited and uninvited guests alike scan the table for something to eat. There is the image of children rocking back and forth, back and forth – hardly aware of our presence. In Unit 2, children sat on the floor, because they cannot stand. They scoot and slide to greet us as we cross the threshold of their room, the “mattress room”. There is one large mattress where the floor is soft. Then I wonder where the sharp smell of urine is coming from. The Unit 5 is where I spent most of my time. It’s the High Dependency Unit. These are the most ill of kids and usually the youngest of kids. Sergei learned to walk! Given a chance, Tanya can use a walker. Marina is all smiles, and then there is Maxim - little brave man. We were alerted to the trend that each volunteer seems to develop an attachment to one child in particular. Maxim became “my guy”. On January 16, Maxim will be 6 years old I could go on and on about the details of my days with Maxim and the children of Unit 5, but it would take pages and pages more. The important thing to note is that in one week, change occurred. Today, Maxim lives. His bedsore is healed, and I can’t wait to see him again. Leaving Maxim and the children of Unit 5 and all the children of the asylum in Vesnova was one of the most difficult things to do. I remember arriving and thinking “7 days and counting.” Arriving seemed hard at the time. Now, arriving is something I can’t wait to do again. When I think of going back, my knees and feet start to bounce – like when you’re anxiously waiting for something...It’s almost here, but just not quite yet, and you think you’re just going to burst! Leaving is the hard part. I came undone, slumped over Maxim’s bed. I cried so hard, it hurt. It hurt so much. The pain in my heart was reminiscent of the pain I’ve felt when someone close to me died. It hurt so much. I tried, I really did – I tried to contain the tears as I made the rounds to say “goodbye”, but I just couldn’t. I’m not sure what the children made of it – I most remember Marina’s face. The smiley little girl in Unit 5 who smiles at anyone who looks at her – such big heart-full smiles she has!...Only this time, her smile had look I’d never seem before. I can only go by my own interpretation, but it was like she didn’t understand my cry. What’s there to be so sad about? I believe that – I believe it for them – as this is all they know, and despite our own conclusions about where they live and the conditions they live in, it’s all they know. As long as there are people who care, they are generally content. My friend Michael had to pick me up and lead me out as I apologized to the children for leaving. I felt so guilty. I could have done more….yet, I would not have changed a thing. Part of me died that day and part of me came to life for the very first time. I continue to receive praise, I am told the children are so fortunate to have had me there, how brave am I to have gone to this unknown region out in the middle of nowhere to visit a group of children that nobody knows and few care about. Many people admit that they wouldn’t be able to do it. I think they could – if they had to. I believe there is strength in all of us that many of us don’t know about, and the greatest strength is in children like the children of Vesnova. This is one week out of my life. I understand that by common western measure, that is brave. The children are the brave ones. The caregivers are brave – there are no queues forming around the block of the employment office for this job. They are eager to learn and were so open to allowing us the time and space to share our work. These children and all these people wake up every morning to the reality they live in. I get to go home. I am fortunate to have known these children. These children have far more to give than I could ever offer them, ever. It is my great fortune and honor to have shared time and space with these beautiful souls and for my life to be changed forever. Life will never be the same. HOME AGAIN When I returned, it took 2 days to begin unpacking. I began pulling clothing from my bag. The smell…it was Vesnova. It was the Asylum. I started to cry and then I nearly started to panic. I kept pulling, frantically pulling more clothes from the bag. Did the next item smell more? How much of Vesnova could I extract from my bag? I cried, and then I sobbed. Finally, slumped over this pile of clothes on the floor, I became unraveled. Doug (my husband) ran in to the laundry room to see what was going on. I stood up, holding a shirt, I asked “Can you smell it? It’s Vesnova, it’s the Asylum, it’s the children. Can you smell it? Can’t you smell it?” My knees gave out as I sobbed. Doug held me up, he cried, and I cried out that I had not done enough. I could have woken up earlier in the morning. I could have missed more meal times. I know it was all emotions speaking, but it’s where I was at the moment. I needed that. It was good. I felt lighter afterward. It’s interesting that the very odor that struck me as I walked through the doors of the Asylum that first night was the odor that turned my stomach every time I had to walk through it, and now it was the very odor I was searching for, even craving – as to not let Vesnova go. This emotional release has happened many times since and with varying intensity. It’s our very private moment that I’m sharing to illustrate the depth of the impact something like this can have. It has taken one month for me to completely unpack. I realize now that I’ve been resistant to unpacking because it symbolizes that the trip is really over. Life will never be the same. ANGELS AMONG US It's so important to me to share this. It’s a feeling that is so visceral, it's so difficult to put to words. I just returned from a short hike with my dog today, now Dec 7, 2005. I cherish this kind of time when I can watch him be free in the meadows of where we live. He runs with freedom, looking back every once in a while to make sure I'm still there -as we are each other’s guardians. It is also my time to think. My thoughts are free from phones and computers.....and I was thinking about breakfast. Being home affords me the time to reconnect with my best of friends. I had breakfast with a gal-pal this morning. We got together as a belated “birthday breakfast” for me. She gave me a gift. It's an angel that illuminates by the light of a tea candle that sits behind it. She said it reminded her of me, for the work that I do around the world. "You are an angel to those children in Belarus, you are an angel to the world, Suzanne.". I looked at her, and because we are so close, I knew it was safe to express exactly what I felt. I said, "I am no angel, the children are. They are the angels." In that moment, we looked at one another in realization. She reached out to hug me, and I become unraveled again - right in the cafe. There is a deep well of tears inside me, and each moment the well opens is unpredictable. I truly believe the children are the angels. They are here to remind us of our own good fortunes and to teach us there is joy to be derived from each day. I believe this with all my heart. Children are a reason for each day to be a celebration – all children. INTO THE VILLAGES The blast at the Nuclear Power Plant in Chernobyl, Northern Ukraine happened 20 years ago this April 2006. That event became most real when we were called out into the neighboring villages. We met the “old people” of Belarus. Igor, one of the liquidators, from the clean-up and build-up project survived and lives in a little house in the country. Igor is from Uzbekistan, and like all the others who were called out for this job, he was not told of the dangers. He never returned home, due to chronic illness. CCPI staff visits him whenever they are out there. We collected our own food to take Igor a care package. It was interesting to be giving Igor directions on how to prepare Quaker Instant Oatmeal. When CCPI is in town, families hear about it and they travel far distances to ask if CCPI can visit their home to help. We made some of these visits. One really memorable visit was to the apartment of a mother and her two girls. The place looks post-nuclear war. Given the situation, this is not a metaphor, really. We were greeted by stray dogs outside the building. We walked up this dark, broken and narrow set of concrete stairs. Up the first flight to the first door on the left. I could immediately smell potatoes boilng – as the smell streamed through the hallway. We walked in to be greeted by the Mother and one girl. The first thing that hit me was the heat on the apartment – it’s cold outside, and the contrast really struck me. Then the fly situation. The apartment is really tiny, so Jennifer and I scooted into the kitchen where the older daughter was siting. She is the main reason why we are here. She sat in the corner on a chair – barefoot, dirty bare feet. Nearly unaware of our presence, Jennifer and I made our way in with video cameras around the kitchen. I had to use the night vision setting. It was day outside, but inside it looked to be nightfall. This is when I noticed the chunks of lard on a plate on the tiny t I’ve thought about this visit many times since. This particular visit sticks out. The poverty was appalling. Sure, poverty is wrong anywhere, but this was different. I thought about the poverty I’d seen and experienced in other countries – namely, South America. I visited the Quechua and Aymara Indians living in the high plains of the Andes mountains of Peru and Bolivia (back in the late 1980’s). My mother was with me, and I recall us talking about how little they had. Then when we were back in the big cities of Lima and La Paz, we were struck by the contrast of poverty. The Indians living in the high plains had it good! Sure, by Western standards, they were poor, but by local Indian standards, they were doing quite nice. They cultivated their own lands using the irrigation systems put in place by the Incas long ago. They had food, shelter and clothing. Talking with an archeologist we met in La Paz, she said “The Indians ‘up there’ do well as long as they have their lands to cultivate, and that they have. The Indians ‘down here’ have to beg for food, and most live on the streets – this is the only life their children know." Now, going back to Belarus, you might say the families in remote villages are like the Indians “up there”, but the primary difference is the availability of resources. These Belarusian families rely on work outside the home to survive – they have nothing at home to grow, make and sell. When we were in the moldy apartment, I looked around and noticed that the apartment was once nice. The fanciness of the wallpaper, the little chandelier, the curtains – all these things left to rot, literally. I thought that from the inside and out, it looked like a nuclear disaster has hit. Hello! It had! This is when I came up with my own term to describe the poverty I saw in Belarus. It’s what I call “inappropriate poverty”. See, the Indians living in the high plains are living little differently from the way their ancestors lived. Sure, per Western standards, they are poor, but per their standards, they are just fine. So, I no longer see that as poverty, per se. What I saw in Belarus is inappropriate poverty. These people have skills, have knowledge, and live in housing that was not built the way it appears today. It’s literally rotting around them, because the landlords can get away with not maintaining it. What will the people do?...move? No. They have nowhere else to go. Belarusians can’t even leave Belarus if they wanted to – it’s nearly impossible to get a visa, even for students. Belarus is all they know. This is inappropriate and it’s unnecessary living in this state of poverty. My grandmother (an Armenian genocide survivor) said, “Just because I am poor, doesn’t mean I have to be dirty.” It was clear to me that these people have the same standard. They are clean and take pride in what little they have. It is what they live in, whom they might live with and the future that beholds them that renders the hopelessness CCPI is addressing. If their feet are dirty, it’s not because they are not clean, it’s because they have no shoes – at the end of the day, hands and feet are washed. If there are flies everywhere, it’s not because they are not clean, it’s because the walls are literally rotting around them and the flies are attracted to that. The mother is a large woman. This is not because she eats well, on the contrary, it’s because her diet consists mainly of lard and bread. This is inappropriate poverty – when there is a national environmental crisis going on that’s spawned an age of social and economic distress the country has never seen, and the government doesn’t help or seek out help, what do the people do? If the government sought out help, they’d be admitting there is a problem. It is a problem, and I believe it’s our problem too. This type of nuclear fallout can happen anywhere in the world. Think about where you live – who will help you? Belarus remains the hardest hit country from the fallout and is currently 99% contaminated. Belarus was considered the Breadbasket of Europe. Now, the people of Belarus are trying to survive, and the people outside of the capital city of Minsk are at greatest risk. The radioactive pollutants are in the ground and water and affect every aspect of their life. Cesium, a primary radioisotope, has a half-life of 72 years. The problems the people of this region are faced with will not peak for another 50 years. The event at Chernobyl changed their lives forever, and it changed mine – only I didn’t know it, really, until now, and I believe it will continue to change my life forever. Thank you, deeply, Belarus! Practical Information: April 26,1986: The Nuclear Reactor at Chernobyl, Northern Ukraine Explodes. Radioactive dust and debris blows by way of the wind that day – into the country of Belarus. Only 3% of the radioactive material contained at the nuclear reactor escaped that day. Today, 97% remains. With that, 99% of Belarus is contaminated (water tables, ground/earth and air – due to airborne contaminants). The sarcophagus that was built around the reactor continues to deteriorate. It’s stood strong 10 years beyond the life it was built for. 2006: Economic, Social, Industrial and Health Challenges continue to plague the people of Belarus. There is hopelessness. It’s palpable. So there is depression and alcoholism. The people are told that vodka will help flush the body of radiation. The alcoholism perpetuates the depression and then there is violence. Physical and mental state is determined at birth. The English translation on the birth certificate of a child born with special needs is ‘Imbecile’. Imbecile! Their fate is sealed. Unwanted, they are taken in by the government. How a child is viewed influences how a child is cared for. The label 'Imbecile' pretty much sums up the fate of the quality of much of the care these children receive. The role of CCPI is to keep families together. For the children who have lost their families, CCPI attempts to keep them in a stimulating environment, healthy, and safe from the dangers of typical government run institutions. Once the children outgrow the Children’s Asylum, they are moved to the Adult Asylum and live a life of hard labor. Because CCPI’s focus is the family and the child, they do not work with the adult Asylums, where the young adults are housed with the undesirables of Belarus: criminals of every kind, perpetrators, murderers, thieves and seriously mentally ill people. Sveta, Sasha, the Cobbler and every child in Vesnova will eventually end up in the Adult Asylum. It is our hope that we can provide them with the training, the skills and the sense of self and hope to survive. CCPI rebuilds run down buildings. They converted a former Nazi headquarters into a beautiful community care and resource center in the town of Zitkovitchy. They are teaching families about herbal farming to grow immune enhancing plants. They train and hire people to staff these facilities and provide medical care and supplies, life saving surgeries, respite summers in Ireland, and they are joining efforts with Ali Hewson (husband is Bono of U2) to provide hospice care – something totally new to the people of Belarus. Pfizer Europe donated a tablet-making machine to make apple pectin tablets – a fat-soluble dietary fiber that is said to assist in extracting radioisotopes from the body. All these efforts are lead by Adi Roche and Sheila Byrne in Ireland and Kathy Ryan in the USA. Adi is CCPI’s founder, and she is one of the most extraordinary people I know. In Ireland and Belarus alike, she is local celebrity, but when in Belarus, she stays at the same hotel frequented by prostitutes, visits the scientists working at the Nuclear Reactor at Chernobyl, visits the families in the area and is committed to doing all she can in the life she lives. We did our best to reduce the risks associated with visiting this area of the planet. I didn’t shower, drank only bottled water brought in from outside Belarus, brushed my teeth with bottled water, covered my nose when walking in the fields and by all means, ate only food we brought ourselves. I went prepared with antibiotic packs and my own herbal pharmacy – all of which I left for the kids. Doug and I want a family, but we are advised to wait at leat 3 months after my last exposure. I’ll be returning in February 2006 on another trip to assist the medical team in compassionate touch approaches with the children in Vesnova.I can’t wait!...and I imagine my life will change all over again. I still can’t wait. I suppose now, in the end, I’ve managed to write quite a bit, and it’s still deficient. It’s like talking about baby massage – I could go on for days! If you wish to learn more, please visit CCPI at http://www.ccp-intl.org/. Suzanne P. Reese, Infant Massage Educator & Trainer and CCPI Volunteer |