The mission of The
Hoosier Coefficient, which appears on
ePrairie every Thursday, is to profile the
often-overlooked rich technology development and
commercialization in Indiana. The Hoosier state
is home to four of the top technology research
and engineering universities in the nation and
tech pros ignore Indiana at their own peril.
Victor Kubik
(left) and Vasyl Pasechnick, the
doctor running the clinic for
Chernobyl children in front of
the now-closed Chernobyl nuclear
power plant. |
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INDIANAPOLIS – A “positive
void coefficient” was the tidy phrase they
used to describe the unspeakable nuclear
conflagration that erupted out of the No. 4
reactor at Chernobyl 20 years ago.
On this date back then, thousands of tons of
airborne strontium-90 and other radioactive
isotope particulates were drifting lazily across
the then-Soviet Union and parts of Eastern
Europe as Soviet administrators began day three
of the disaster with renewed
official denials that the thundering
radioactive fires represented anything but a
“minor incident”.
Though they didn’t know it, hundreds of
firefighters and Soviet soldiers were already
sentenced to a gruesome death: they were
lethally saturated with gamma radiation
streaming from the sparkling blue molten fuel
rods.
Years later, U.N. and other officials
estimate that more than 100 times the radiation
from the Hiroshima blast was released on April
26, 1986 with the true effects still not known.
In a twisted turn of events, the aftereffects of
Chernobyl are today intensely studied by U.S.
Homeland Security experts as the reactor blast
now serves as a macabre model for the possible
repercussions of a terrorist “dirty bomb”.
Intense media coverage followed the days
immediately following the disaster as the
Gorbachev administration reluctantly disclosed
the extent of the catastrophe and even solicited
Western aid. After a few weeks, the media –
together with much of the world – turned their
attention elsewhere.
Despite increasing leakages and unstable
structural issues, the shuttered nuclear
facility today represents a growing tourist
attraction. The nearby abandoned city of Pripyat
and other official radioactive “dead zones” now
attract regular visitors and
commentary about the hazards associated with
atom-focused electrical generation.
Despite the faded media attention, severe
health issues began materializing around the
Chernobyl area particularly in children born in
the years following.
Perhaps most horrific of all, young girls
exposed to Chernobyl radiation (who later became
mothers in the 1990s) started showing up with
“germ line” mutations: changes in the DNA of
sperm and human eggs. Warned Denise Adler, a
radiation expert at the University of Geneva in
Switzerland: “Genetic defects may remain hidden
for several generations. We have to expect
more.”
This highly
radioactive ferris wheel in
Pripyat has become a symbol of
the Chernobyl devastation. It
will never be ridden again.
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Pediatric thyroid cancer levels exploded in
the years following the explosion.
Radiation-related children illnesses increased
to the point where the BBC reported that four
out of five children living in Chernihev (a city
of 250,000 near Chernobyl) suffered from some
Chernobyl-influenced malady.
As the pediatric cases mounted up, available
health-care resources in the Ukraine were
quickly outstripped particularly in the years
following the breakup of the former Soviet
Union. For helpless and largely forgotten
children victims of the nuclear disaster, the
future looked increasingly grim.
On a visit to England 10 years after the
explosion, Indianapolis resident Victor Kubik (a
second-generation Ukrainian and U.S. citizen)
learned from a retired British pediatrician of
the growing problem.
The pediatrician, Morris Frohm, was joining
other British medical professionals to try to
assess the real situation. Kubik, who was born
in a World War II German relocation camp before
emigrating to the U.S. with his parents, still
had family living in Ukraine. Knowing the
culture and language, he impulsively volunteered
as a translator.
“I was horrified at the news of all of these
children in overcrowded hospitals,” Kubik
recalled for ePrairie. “I just had to do
something.”
Pleasantly surprised, the pediatrician agreed
and the two made plans. A few months later, the
pair stepped off a plane in Kiev and Kubik’s
life was changed forever. Evidence of economic
chaos from the breakup of the Soviet Union was
everywhere (Ukraine was now an independent
county). What immediately caught Kubik’s eye
were little black boxes in public buildings and
walkways.
While Kubik first thought they were modified
clocks to display time and temperature for the
region, they weren’t. Instead, they represented
the sinister presence of Chernobyl as they
measured and displayed microrads from airborne
nuclides (even a full decade after the reactor
exploded). He added: “People living in Ukraine
were thus reminded every day of what they were
living in. It was depressing.”
What was even more depressing was the
Ukrainian hospitals filled with sick children in
some cases to double capacity. Kubik, whose
full-time job is that of a pastor and
administrator with the
United Church of God, felt “overwhelmingly
compelled to do something,” he said. He and the
British pediatrician were introduced to a
pediatrician from the Chernobyl area named Vasyl
Pasechnick.
Pasechnick, who was later decorated for
bravery, drew official Soviet ire immediately
after the Chernobyl explosion when he publicly
called for massive distribution of iodide
(particularly for the children living in the
area). Had his public plea been heeded,
absorption of the iodide would have reduced
radiation poisoning of the children’s thyroid
glands. He was muzzled and disciplined, though,
by Soviet authorities trying to contain news of
the explosion.
Ten years after the nuclear disaster,
Pasechnick was struggling to build and run a
children’s clinic to deal with the
rehabilitation nightmare of hundreds of children
trying to overcome the latent effects of the
blast (both physical and psychological).
Kubik, a self-professed technology geek, set
out with his wife, Beverly, to help Pasechnick.
In the early days of the commercial Internet,
Kubik taught himself enough HTML code and Web
authoring skills to put up a Web site to attract
attention to Pasechnick’s center, which is now
called The Revival Centre.
Working the phones to build a network and
scouring federal documents, Kubik and his wife
found a means to ship critically needed medical
supplies to the center. Battling bureaucratic
delays, customs issues and outright graft by
government employees, Kubik, his wife and a
growing band of volunteers managed to ship more
than $1 million in supplies to Pasechnick.
Kubik subsequently brought Pasechnick over to
the U.S. in the late 1990s to meet other medical
professionals at St. Jude’s Hospital in
Nashville, Riley Children’s Hospital in
Indianapolis and other major medical operations
specializing in children.
On this trip, Pasechnick and Kubik were
invited to meet Indiana First Lady Judy
O’Bannon. The meeting turned into a partnership:
“I was quite taken with both the Ukrainian
doctor and with Vic,” O’Bannon said. “Victor
profoundly struck me as a true servant leader
and someone who could do a lot of good for
people.”
The meeting spawned the founding of a new
humanitarian organization in Indianapolis called
LifeNets International. With the help of the
Internet, Kubik now serves dozens of
humanitarian projects around the world from his
Indianapolis home.
Largely through the direct support of this
organization, the Ukrainian center has grown to
serve hundreds of Chernobyl-affected children.
Kubik will return to the center in June for its
10th anniversary. Joining him this time will be
several Ukrainian government officials and the
British ambassador to the Ukraine to recognize
what a difference one selfless human being can
make.
Michael Snyder is principal of
The MEK Group, a marketing and business
development consulting firm that provides
communications-driven strategies to increase
market share, enhance productivity and build
distinctive brand awareness. Snyder can be
reached at
msnyder@themekgroup.com.
Click
here for Snyder’s full biography.
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