Journey Back to Chernobyl
April 26, 2006 — -- It's one of the spookiest places I've ever been.
Haunted not just by the people who used to live there but also by the aspirations -- some would say hubris -- of the society they served.
For example, in Chernobyl a huge Russian sign stands in front of a row of pine trees on the road leading to the Dead Zone. It's an environmental slogan, left over from the Soviet era. "Trees are the lungs of the planet!" it says.
Now trees have this place almost all to themselves. The man-made catastrophe that happened here 20 years ago means it'll be thousands of years before this region is safe again for humans.
The children of Chernobyl are all grown up now. We met quite a few of them, all haunted in one way or another by the experience.
One of them, Nikolai Luchinsky, took us back to his family's old apartment in Pripyet, the small city that served as worker housing for the reactor.
He was 6 years old when he left this apartment, located less than a mile from the fire in Reactor 4 that was more radioactive than Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined.
It was clear the family had left in a rush. On the windowsill were still the syringes full of medicine -- antidotes for radiation poisoning. On the walls of what used to be the kitchen were hot rod stickers Nikolai had put there 20 years ago, when he was 6. He showed us the secret shelf in his closet, where he used to hide his childhood treasures.
But much is gone, as the place has been picked over. Even though radioactive dust is everywhere, it hasn't kept looters away.
Nikolai posted his phone number on the wall of the apartment building, hoping some of his old friends would contact him. He hasn't heard from most of his friends since they were kids. He has no idea what's happened to them.
Another woman we met, named Tamara, was the same age as Nikolai. The 25-year old is now a schoolteacher and mother. And she has thyroid cancer, just diagnosed.
Thyroid cancer surged among the children of Chernobyl, because of their exposure to high doses of radioactive iodine. It's the only cancer with a proven link to Chernobyl, although doctors suspect new cases of leukemia, along with retinal tumors, are also results of the accident.