Chernobyl children in Cuba - radiation victims are treated
Progressive, The, Nov, 1994 by Alex Tehrani
Tarara, Cuba
This beach-front town twenty kilometers east of downtown Havana was once a resort area for the wealthy. After the Cuban revolution, it became a recreational summer camp for Cuban children. In the past four years, the ethnic makeup of Tarara has become heavily Ukrainian, as Soviet children arrive by the thousands to receive treatment for illnesses related to the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.
The idea of this solidarity project is to provide the young victims of Chernobyl not only with medical assistance but also with a playful, stress-free atmosphere that encourages rehabilitation. The result is a peculiar scene: blond-haired, blue-eyed youngsters with various radiation-related illnesses running and laughing in the surf of the Caribbean island. They arrive on Air Ukraine wearing long jackets, ski hats, and boots, and anxiously begin adapting to their new surroundings, trading warm clothes for bathing suits and taking on a tanned, relaxed appearance.
In 1990, in response to an international plea for assistance for the victims of Chernobyl, two countries immediately stepped forward. Israel committed to taking in fifty Jewish victims, and Cuba offered to host an initial 10,000 children, and as many as 50,000 by the year 2000. The only cost the Cuban government would not cover was the air fare. News of the gesture confused analysts. Cuba was already suffering shortages of food, electricity, oil, and paper. Many wondered how the government could justify offering aid on such a grand scale to another country--particularly the Soviet Union, which was in the process of cutting back financial and material aid to Cuba from 85 per cent of everything the island nation received from the outside to next to nothing. The project is partly a show of solidarity toward Cuba's former benefactors, and partly a shrewd political calculation inlcuding the expectation that the gesture might be returned.
The Soviets have not been bashful about creating homes for themselves at Tarara, decorating their airy, high-ceilinged beach houses with posters from their towns and appropriating the food Cuba provides to cook tasty yogurt desserts and blintzes.
Tarara itself is an impressive town. It is eleven square kilometers, complete with two kilometers of beach and 521 homes, a cultural center with a movie theater, two enormous playing fields, an amusement park, and a small zoo. There is a central hospital with 350 beds, and several smaller treatment centers and testing labs. A dedicated Cuban staff of 400, including fifty doctors and eighty nurses, squeeze onto packed buses from all over Havana in order to get to Tarara each day.
While many of the long-term patients have learned Spanish and salsa dancing, the Ukrainian program director has established a schedule to imitate daily life back home. A bilingual Russian and Ukrainian school is staffed by volunteer teachers, mostly parents of the visiting children, so that there is no interruption in the children's studies.
Six-year-old Alexei Junostenko and his father, Anatoli, came to Cuba in a last-ditch effort to save Alexei's life. When Alexei was two years old, he was diagnosed with leukemia and given three months to live by a Ukrainian doctor. Anatoli did not have the $40,000 to $50,000 needed for treatment, so he took a friend's advice and made a desperate visit to a Cuban medical commission in Kiev. The two were selected to fly immediately to Havana.
"Now, after four years here, the boy is alive, running, smiling," Anatoli told me over a cup of tea at his Tarara home. "To be away from the snow, to have food provided, and to be surrounded by people who are committed to making our children feel better about the consequences of this disaster cannot be downplayed.... There is hope for the future."
More:
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1295/is_n11_v58/ai_15890043/http://www.cubaheadlines.com.nyud.net:8090/files/cubaheadlines.com/imagenes/ni%C3%B1os%20de%20chern0bil.jpg
http://i.telegraph.co.uk.nyud.net:8090/telegraph/multimedia/archive/01377/chernobyl-girls_1377320i.jpg
Ukrainian girls Annia, 11, and Dina, 16, victims of radiation fallout
from the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster, sit in an office at the Ped
iatric Hospital in Tarara, outside Havana. For the past 19 years, Cuba
has been providing free health treatment to around 24,000 child victims
of the Chernobyl explosion in Ukraine
Picture: REUTERS
http://www.havanatimes.org.nyud.net:8090/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/estefania-y-nastia.jpg
http://cache.daylife.com.nyud.net:8090/imageserve/095f0Dggr60IJ/340x.jpg
Reuters Pictures 12 months ago
A Ukranian girl who is a victim of the radiation fallout
from the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster, walks with her
mother at the Pediatric Hospital in Tarara, outside of
Havana, April 1, 2009. For the past 19 years, Cuba has
been providing free health treatment to around 24,000
child victims of the Chernobyl explosion in Ukraine.
~~~~~Revolutionary care: Castro's doctors give hope to the children of Chernobyl
Young victims continue to receive treatment in Cuba two decades after Ukrainian nuclear disaster
Andres Schipani in Tarara
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 2 July 2009 18.51 BST
http://static.guim.co.uk.nyud.net:8090/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2009/7/2/1246556991176/Ukrainian-victims-of-the--001.jpgUkrainian victims of the fallout from the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in
Cuba for treatment. More than 18,000 have been treated since 1990.
Photograph: Claudia Daut/Reuters
Eleven-year-old Olga enters the beach house in flip-flops, her hair still wet from a dip in the Caribbean. "I really like it here," she says. "The food is great, the beach is awesome. I made some fantastic friends."
A typical child's reaction to a beach holiday, perhaps – only this is no ordinary seaside break. Olga is a Ukrainian "Chernobyl child", in Cuba not for a holiday but to undergo intensive medical treatment with some of the country's best doctors. She goes to school along with 180 other Ukrainian children. "I miss some bits of my home town," she muses. "But I don't ever want to leave."
Olga is one of more than 18,000 Ukrainian children to have been treated over the years at the Tarara facility near the Cuban capital, Havana. The programme was set up in 1990 to treat the victims of the world's most devastating nuclear accident four years earlier.
A steady procession of children with bald heads, skin lesions and other malformations have since benefited from splashing in the clear blue Caribbean waters. Twenty-three years after Chernobyl, the Cuban programme is still going strong. Remarkably, children born years after the disaster still suffer physical consequences of the meltdown that irradiated large parts of Ukraine and Belarus; equally remarkably, despite isolation and economic miasma, Cuba still manages to tend to them.
Olga's freckled face is marbled with pink and brown patches due to depigmentation. Her arms and legs are also affected. She suffers from vitiligo, a skin disease that some believe is caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Both those causes can be attributed to her case: she was born in a small village in the northern Rivne province in Ukraine, near Chernobyl.
More:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jul/02/cuba-chernobyl-health-children~~~~~Recommending, #3.