When Vanya Came Home
Alabama’s “Children of Chernobyl” program is a story that’s still unfolding. The Lee family, of Pelham, took in nine year old “Vanya” from the nation of Belarus in the year 2000. “Children of Chernobyl” was created to bring kids living in the shadow of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster to Alabama for medical treatment and a chance to escape the contamination. What the Lee family didn’t know was the effect Vanya’s visit would have on them twenty years later.
info_outline Welcome to AlabamaWhen Vanya Came Home
If you thought your last airline flight was challenging, try it with eighty children! Twenty years ago, families in Alabama took in youngsters from the former Soviet nation of Belarus, who grew up in the shadow of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster. Part three of our podcast starts at the airport in Minsk, where nervous Belarusian parents said goodbye to their children. Nine year old “Ivan” would be making his first foreign airplane flight. Forty days later, there was the painful goodbye, but the story doesn’t end there.
info_outline The Inside ManWhen Vanya Came Home
Starting in 1999, families in Alabama knew they wanted to take in children from the former Soviet nation of Belarus, who lived in the shadow of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster. But, they also knew they couldn’t just walk up to families in Belarus, and say “Hi, do you want to send your kids to a foreign country to stay with people you don’t know?” They needed an “inside man” to pave the way.
info_outline The ReunionWhen Vanya Came Home
Alabama’s “Children of Chernobyl” program is a story that’s still unfolding. The Lee family, of Pelham, took in nine year old “Vanya” from the nation of Belarus in the year 2000. “Children of Chernobyl” was created to bring kids living in the shadow of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster to Alabama for medical treatment and a chance to escape the contamination. What the Lee family didn’t know was the effect Vanya’s visit would have on them twenty years later.
info_outlineStarting in 1999, families in Alabama knew they wanted to take in children from the former Soviet nation of Belarus, who lived in the shadow of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear plant disaster. But, they also knew they couldn’t just walk up to families in Belarus, and say “Hi, do you want to send your kids to a foreign country to stay with people you don’t know?” They needed an “inside man” to pave the way.