Wednesday

Ignored for Decades, New Mexicans Suffered in Silence - Until Now

Residents of Tularosa and other south central New Mexico communities spend a lot of time at cemeteries. Photos by Luis Sanchez Saturno/The Santa Fe New Mexican

Trinity July 16, 1945
Seventy years after the United States launched what some describe as a surprise nuclear attack on the citizens of southern New Mexico, residents there feel they have been abandoned by their government and left to deal on their own with three generations of what appear to be radiation-induced illnesses and deaths that have left few families unscathed, and that continue to this day.

With your help, our feature-length documentary film will tell the story of these forgotten and apparently expendable Americans. and perhaps bring about recognition and compensation for their sacrifices.
The ranchers, citizens of small towns and the Mescalero Apache community, scattered in some cases within 10 miles of the first detonation of an atomic bomb on July 16, 1945, were at the epicenter of an epochal historical event - the unleashing of the unparalleled might of the tiny atom. But little has been told about their decades of suffering since the blast. 

Before Hiroshima -Carrizozo

A sign posted by the Defense Department warns Trinity visitors of possible dangers, even now, more than 60 years after the detonation of "the gadget."

 We know of the suffering of the citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but few are aware of the deaths and illnesses the U.S. apparently inflicted on its own citizens before the bombs were ever dropped on Japan.

“The rising fireball was "the biggest thing I had ever seen in my life. It was rolling, getting fatter and bigger and taller, one Trinity witness recently recalled. (http://reut.rs/h7SUi0) "My mother said: "The sun is coming close. The world is coming to an end." She told me to drop to my knees, but I kept looking. If it was the end of the world, I wanted to see it. I was waiting for God to come out from around the ball of fire."

A recent 10-year study by the National Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed that the New Mexicans on ranches and in surrounding communities were never warned of the impending blast. No one was ever evacuated, and no precautions were ever advised, either before the blast or since, regarding the safety of their health, the water or food supplies.

The Trinity downwinders fear that their communities are still being poisoned by toxic remnants of the Trinity detonation set off by Manhattan Project scientists on what is now the White Sands Missile Range in south-central New Mexico. They have generations' worth of evidence that something is very wrong.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous23:58

    I wish that your signs on Saturday had a clear link to a Facebook page, blog, website, etc, or that you all had set up an informational booth somewhere (I know that's easier said than done) with handouts showing the data you have collected. I am not a New Mexican (although I live close) and did not see any of these news stories until I googled "Trinity protesters". I can almost guarantee that most of the people who saw you protesting dismissed you and did not bother to find out who you were. Based on the shock value of the signs and make-up, I was inclined to do so. Please, please, please, consider finding a better way of disseminating information next year at the Trinity event. I will continue to visit the Trinity site as I believe it is an important historical site, but I'd like to hear all sides of the story.

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    1. To be clear, the demonstration was not organized by the makers of this film. I have passed along your comment to Tina Cordova of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, which did stage the demonstration on behalf of all those whose deaths and illnesses appear linked to the Trinity detonation. Thank you for your comment and concern.

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