Nuclear Family

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“The militarization of light has been widely acknowledged as a historical rupture that brought into being a continuous Nuclear Age, but less understood is the way in which our bodies are written by these wars of light.”
 –– Elizabeth DeLoughrey, 
 “Radiation Ecologies and the Wars of Light” (2009)
 

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7 In the beginning, Izanagi and Izanami stood on the bridge of heaven and stirred the sea with a jeweled spear until the first island was born.               Then one day, men who claimed to be gods said: “Let there be atomic light,” and there was a blinding flash, a mushroom cloud, and radiating fire. “This will end all wars,” they said. “This will bring peace to the divided world.” 6 In the beginning, Áłtsé Hastiin and Áłtsé Asdzą́ą́, ascended from the First World of darkness until they reached the glittering waters of this Fourth World, where the yellow snake, Leetso, dwelled underground.                Then one day, men who claimed to be gods said: “Let there be uranium,” and they dug a thousand unventilated mines. They unleashed Leetso and said: “This will enrich us all.” 5 In the beginning, Lowa spoke the islands into being and created four gods to protect each direction. The first people emerged from a wound in Lowa’s body.                 Then one day, men who claimed to be gods said: “Let there be thermonuclear light,” and there were countless detonations. And they said: “Bravo! This is for the good of mankind.” 4 In the beginning, Fu’una transformed the eyes of Puntan into the sun and moon, and his back into an island. Then her body transformed into stone and birthed my people.                 Then one day, men who claimed to be gods said: “Let there be bone seeker,” and trade winds rained strontium 90 upon us, and irradiated ships were washed in our waters. And they said: “This is for national security.” 3 In the beginning, Wolf created earth from mud. Then his younger brother, Coyote, carried a woven basket full of the first people to the Great Basin.                 Then one day, men who claimed to be gods said: “Let there be plowshare,” and the desert cratered, and white dust snowed upon the four corners. And they said: “This is for peaceful construction.” 2 In the beginning, there was no contamination. Then the men who claimed to be gods said: “Let there be fallout,” and our sacred homes and bodies became proving grounds, waste dumps, and tailings. “Let there be fallout,” and there was a chain reaction of leukemia and lymphoma, miscarriages and birth defects, lung and liver cancer, breast and uterus cancer, thyroid and bone cancer.                  And we learned that there is no half-life of grief when a loved one dies from radiation disease. There is no half-life of sorrow when our children inherit this toxic legacy, this generational and genetic aftermath, this fission of worlds. 1 In the beginning, there was peace. Let there be peace for Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and the Marshall Islands. Let there be peace for the Navajo and Shoshone Nations. Let there be peace for Mororua, Fangataufa, In Ekker, Kirimati, Maralinga, and Amchitka. Let there be peace for Malan, Montebello Islands, Malden Island, Pokhran, and Ras Koh Hills. Let there be peace for Chagai District, Semipalatinsk, Novaya Zemlya, Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, Punggye-ri, and Fukushima. Let there be peace for the downwinders, from Guam to Utah to every radiation ecology and every irradiated species.                 Let there be the safe disposal of waste and the cleaning of abandoned mines. Let there be the disarmament of the violent nucleus within nations. Let there be a proliferation of peace across our atomic cartography. Let there be healing, justice, and fair compensation for our entire nuclear family. Let there be stories of creation, not stories of annihilation, for our sublime children, so they can illuminate radiant futures. [/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]
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