August 24, 2006 By Bob Vernon
CARY, N.C. – This year marks the 20th anniversary of an explosion at the Chernobyl
nuclear power plant in what was then the Soviet Union. Radioactive
fallout equivalent to 150 Hiroshima atomic bomb blasts spewed for 10 days over
77,000 square miles. Most of the damage caused by the
April 26, 1986, explosion was felt – and continues to be experienced – by the
10 million residents of the Republic of Belarus, which received 70 percent of
the Chernobyl radiation. Some of the land around Chernobyl
will never be habitable again. Farther away from ground zero, the effects of the
radiation will be felt for generations. It is the children of these areas that
a group of Americans is reaching out to help. The American
Belarussian Relief Organization was created in 1991 for the sole purpose of helping
children in the contaminated areas. White Plains United Methodist Church of Cary,
N.C., was one of the first churches to get involved in the program. Each summer
for a decade, it has brought children from Belarus to North Carolina. Money
for the plane tickets and visas is raised by church members who operate a food
concession at the annual fall North Carolina State Fair. Other expenses are covered
by special offerings. Church members who are in the medical profession donate
their services to the children. Judi Brettschneider,
ABRO project coordinator for the White Plains church, has made many trips to Belarus.
The six children who are guests of the church this year are all orphans. As Brettschneider
describes the conditions in the village where the orphanage is located, she sounds
as if she might be talking about a community from another century. She
says people in the area do not have indoor plumbing, and they line up at a central
pump to get their daily water supply. The quality of medical care is no better
than their water system, says Brettschneider. "I appreciate
what I have a lot more than I did," Brettschneider says. "I understand that life
is not easy for everybody. My life is easy. Even when I have a bad day, my life
is easy." Medical care The
children, ranging in age from 8 to 15, stay with church families for six weeks.
The days are filled with picnics and fun on area lakes along with trips to seemingly
magical supermarkets and shopping centers. Visits to
American doctors are the most significant part of their summer experiences. While
the most common ailments in the highly contaminated villages of Belarus are leukemia
and Hodgkin's disease, most of the children have suppressed immune systems that
make them vulnerable to other medical problems as well. One
of the children brought here for several summers by the White Plains church has
tuberculosis. Each year, she has been treated by North Carolina doctors and medicine
has been sent home with her. This summer she shows no signs of the disease. Another
child is being treated by Dr. Steven Boyce, an ears, nose and throat specialist,
who is a church member. He says the girl has a condition that needs surgery or
she will soon lose hearing in one ear. Boyce is looking
for a way to make sure the child gets the necessary operation. He says her best
option would be to return later in the year for the procedure. A
transforming experience The interchange between the Americans
and the children of Belarus is not a one-way street. Church member Patti Crane
says she has learned much from 14-year-old Vika, the teenager staying with the
Crane family. "There are a lot of things that make her happy, and material things
aren't necessarily the things that make her happy." While
many of the host families would like to adopt the orphans, the Belarus government
will not allow it. "I do worry and am concerned about what happens to (Vika) while
she is back in the orphanage," Crane says. "Our church
and our church members are transformed," says the Rev. Kelly Lyn Logue associate
pastor of the White Plains church, "because we don't write a check to tend to
these kids, we actually live out our commitment to them. We all learn new ways
of communicating and find that offering home and shelter, friendship and love
translates the same in any language." The church is already
making plans to expand the program and to sponsor additional children from Belarus
next summer. More information is available at http://www.abro.org/
online. United Methodist News Service Bob Vernon
is a freelance producer in Cary, N.C. |