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Our History
Belarus, a small country which was part of the former Soviet Union
received approximately 70% of the radiation damage from the April
26, 1986 Chernobyl nuclear power plant incident. The southern third
received the most radiation in Belarus. The explosion released 90
times as much radiation as the Hiroshima Bomb. This has effected
the health of the people especially the children due to its effect
on the immune system. This has resulted in thyroid disease and thyroid
cancer, an increase of leukemia and birth defects, and vitamin deficiencies.
In 1991, members of the Connecticut River Valley Fellowship, a
Baptist Church in South Windsor, Connecticut, welcomed 13 children
and two adults from the Mogilev region of Belarus. They housed the
children for a period of six weeks, giving their bodies a rest from
the physical and emotional stress of living in a contaminated environment.
If the children are removed from the area for that approximate period
of time, the level of radiation in their bodies is lowered.
From this experience, there was a desire on the part of Americans
involved with this project to see conditions in the contaminated
zone of Belarus. In January 1993, they met with concerned business,
political and religious leaders in the Mogilev region. Out of those
meetings, ABRO was born as a unique partnership between concerned
peoples of both Belarus and the United States.
Since 1991, over 3,100 children from Belarus have made the trip
to the United States for rest and medical evaluation through the
efforts of ABRO. Another 400 children have benefited from the summer
camps held in the uncontaminated region of Belarus.
This summer we had 560 children ranging in age from 7 to 16 years
old from Belarus along with their 56 chaperones in America. They were in 15 states and we had a
total of 48 groups. A group has as few as 5 children and as many
as 40 children.
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