ホーリー・モリス「なぜチェルノブイリに留まるのか?それは故郷だから」 | TEDのすゝめ ( TED 英語 スーパープレゼンテーション 洋楽 映画 スポーツ )

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Holly Morris: Why stay in Chernobyl? Because it's home.
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Holly Morris: Why stay in Chernobyl? Because it's home.

小さいことは気にすんなッ、主題と主張をつかもう!
Fukushima でも警戒区域内で生活している人の動画をYouTube でみたことがあります→ 原発20キロ圏内に生きる男

【話題】 チェルノブイリで生きる
【時間】 8分52秒
【要約】
1.チェルノブイリの事故から25年
 仕事として原発事故から25年経ったチェルノブイリを取材した。四号機をコンクリートで封じ込めた石棺は、ひび割れて放射能が漏れだしている。取材が終わったら一刻も早く帰りたかった。

2.チェルノブイリで生きるおばあちゃんたち
 原発の直ぐそばの農家の屋根から煙が上るのが見えた。排除区域内に200人が住んでいる。ほとんどが70代、80代の女性だ。彼女たちは法律にも軍隊にも背いて、ふるさとに帰ることを選んだ。周辺の村々にそれぞれ7~8人が暮らしている。

3.放射能より怖いもの
 これらの女性たちは20世紀の大飢饉や第二次世界大戦といった辛く厳しい経験をしてきた。彼女たちにとっては目に見えない放射能は恐くはないのだ。

4.みじめな10年より幸福な5年
 ふるさとを離れ先祖や家族と離れてみじめな10年を生きるよりも、幸福な5年を生きることを選んだのだ。

5.自然の回復
 人間たちが逃げ出したのとは反対に、イノシシ、オオヤマネコ、ムース、オオカミといった野生生物が大挙してチェルノブイリ周辺に帰ってきた。

6.放射能と健康
 チェルノブイリから脱出した人々の健康が害されている事実に異論はない。しかし一方で、チェルノブイリに引き返したおばあちゃんたちが、避難した人々よりも10年も長生きしているという事実もある。

7.ふるさと
 「我が家」とは一時的な概念だ。祖先から受け継いだ土地に住むということ、あるいはふるさとに住むということが、放射能に負けない理由なのかもしれない。あと10年もすれば、このおばあちゃんたちも死に絶えるだろう。しかしおばあちゃんたちの魂は、私たちに「ふるさととのつながりの強さ」と「自分で決めること」の大切さを教えてくれる。

【語彙】

dosimeter :線量計

berserk :鳴り狂う

frenetic :大騒ぎする、熱狂する

reluctantly :不本意ながら

sarcophagus :石棺

hastily :慌てて

rust :さびる

exclusion zone :排除区域

draconian :厳格に

eerily :不気味に

bucolic :田舎風の

demographic :人口動態

the obvious :明白なこと

starvation :飢餓

atrocity :残虐行為

famine :飢饉

Holodomor :スターリンの移住計画によって人工的に引き起こされた飢饉

high rise  :高層ビル

outskirts  :郊外

devastation :荒廃

boar :いのしし

lynx :オオヤマネコ

trump :切り札?

exodus :流出

heroic resilience :壮大な回復力

plain-spoken pragmatism :率直な現実主義

patina :緑青

defiance :反抗

parse :解析

conflicting :矛盾した

fraught :悲惨

disrupt :崩壊させる

palpable :明白な

versed :精通した

aphorism :格言

palliative :一時しのぎ

flummoxed :面食らった、困惑顔の

grapple with :取り組む


【transcripts】

Three years ago, I was standing about a hundred yards from Chernobyl nuclear reactor number four. My Geiger counter dosimeter, which measures radiation, was going berserk, and the closer I got, the more frenetic it became, and frantic. My God.


I was there covering the 25th anniversary of the world's worst nuclear accident, as you can see by the look on my face, reluctantly so, but with good reason, because the nuclear fire that burned for 11 days back in 1986 released 400 times as much radiation as the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, and the sarcophagus, which is the covering over reactor number four, which was hastily built 27 years ago, now sits cracked and rusted and leaking radiation.


So I was filming. I just wanted to get the job done and get out of there fast. But then, I looked into the distance, and I saw some smoke coming from a farmhouse, and I'm thinking, who could be living here? I mean, after all, Chernobyl's soil, water and air, are among the most highly contaminated on Earth, and the reactor sits at the the center of a tightly regulated exclusion zone, or dead zone, and it's a nuclear police state, complete with border guards. You have to have dosimeter at all times, clicking away, you have to have a government minder, and there's draconian radiation rules and constant contamination monitoring. The point being, no human being should be living anywhere near the dead zone. But they are.


It turns out an unlikely community of some 200 people are living inside the zone. They're called self-settlers. And almost all of them are women, the men having shorter lifespans in part due to overuse of alcohol, cigarettes, if not radiation. Hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated at the time of the accident, but not everybody accepted that fate. The women in the zone, now in their 70s and 80s, are the last survivors of a group who defied authorities and, it would seem, common sense, and returned to their ancestral homes inside the zone. They did so illegally. As one woman put it to a soldier who was trying to evacuate her for a second time, "Shoot me and dig the grave. Otherwise, I'm going home."


Now why would they return to such deadly soil? I mean, were they unaware of the risks or crazy enough to ignore them, or both? The thing is, they see their lives and the risks they run decidedly differently.


Now around Chernobyl, there are scattered ghost villages, eerily silent, strangely charming, bucolic, totally contaminated. Many were bulldozed under at the time of the accident, but a few are left like this, kind of silent vestiges to the tragedy. Others have a few residents in them, one or two "babushkas," or "babas," which are the Russian and Ukrainian words for grandmother. Another village might have six or seven residents. So this is the strange demographic of the zone -- isolated alone together.


And when I made my way to that piping chimney I'd seen in the distance, I saw Hanna Zavorotnya, and I met her. She's the self-declared mayor of Kapavati village, population eight. (Laughter) And she said to me, when I asked her the obvious, "Radiation doesn't scare me. Starvation does."


And you have to remember, these women have survived the worst atrocities of the 20th century. Stalin's enforced famines of the 1930s, the Holodomor, killed millions of Ukrainians, and they faced the Nazis in the '40s, who came through slashing, burning, raping, and in fact many of these women were shipped to Germany as forced labor. So when a couple decades into Soviet rule, Chernobyl happened, they were unwilling to flee in the face of an enemy that was invisible. So they returned to their villages and are told they're going to get sick and die soon, but five happy years, their logic goes, is better than 10 stuck in a high rise on the outskirts of Kiev, separated from the graves of their mothers and fathers and babies, the whisper of stork wings on a spring afternoon. For them, environmental contamination may not be the worst sort of devastation. It turns out this holds true for other species as well. Wild boar, lynx, moose, they've all returned to the region in force, the very real, very negative effects of radiation being trumped by the upside of a mass exodus of humans. The dead zone, it turns out, is full of life.


And there is a kind of heroic resilience, a kind of plain-spoken pragmatism to those who start their day at 5 a.m. pulling water from a well and end it at midnight poised to beat a bucket with a stick and scare off wild boar that might mess with their potatoes, their only company a bit of homemade moonshine vodka. And there's a patina of simple defiance among them. "They told us our legs would hurt, and they do. So what?" I mean, what about their health? The benefits of hardy, physical living, but an environment made toxic by a complicated, little-understood enemy, radiation. It's incredibly difficult to parse. Health studies from the region are conflicting and fraught. The World Health Organization puts the number of Chernobyl-related deaths at 4,000, eventually. Greenpeace and other organizations put that number in the tens of thousands. Now everybody agrees that thyroid cancers are sky high, and that Chernobyl evacuees suffer the trauma of relocated peoples everywhere: higher levels of anxiety, depression, alcoholism, unemployment and, importantly, disrupted social networks.


Now, like many of you, I have moved maybe 20, 25 times in my life. Home is a transient concept. I have a deeper connection to my laptop than any bit of soil. So it's hard for us to understand, but home is the entire cosmos of the rural babushka, and connection to the land is palpable. And perhaps because these Ukrainian women were schooled under the Soviets and versed in the Russian poets, aphorisms about these ideas slip from their mouths all the time.


"If you leave, you die."


"Those who left are worse off now. They are dying of sadness."


"Motherland is motherland. I will never leave."


What sounds like faith, soft faith, may actually be fact, because the surprising truth -- I mean, there are no studies, but the truth seems to be that these women who returned to their homes and have lived on some of the most radioactive land on Earth for the last 27 years, have actually outlived their counterparts who accepted relocation, by some estimates up to 10 years.


How could this be? Here's a theory: Could it be that those ties to ancestral soil, the soft variables reflected in their aphorisms, actually affect longevity? The power of motherland so fundamental to that part of the world seems palliative. Home and community are forces that rival even radiation.


Now radiation or not, these women are at the end of their lives. In the next decade, the zone's human residents will be gone, and it will revert to a wild, radioactive place, full only of animals and occasionally daring, flummoxed scientists. But the spirit and existence of the babushkas, whose numbers have been halved in the three years I've known them, will leave us with powerful new templates to think about and grapple with, about the relative nature of risk, about transformative connections to home, and about the magnificent tonic of personal agency and self-determination.


Thank you.