If you lived near Chernobyl, would you stay?To the world, Chernobyl seems a place of danger, but for locals, Chernobyl is simply a fact of life.On April 26, 1986, an explosion at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant changed history, sending radiation and political shockwaves across Europe. Radioactive fallout contaminated 56,700 square miles of Ukraine, Belarus and Russia, a region larger than New York state.In the popular imagination, the Chernobyl region is a wasteland--forsaken, hazardous and inaccessible. And yet, a generation later, life continues in these radiation-affected areas. Six million people still reside here.The contaminated region is divided into four zones based on amount of radiation. The Chernobyl Exclusion Zone with highest contamination is officially uninhabited. In truth, over 2,000 elderly villagers illegally resettled their homes and farms inside the Zone. Today nearly 400 remain. More than 3,000 workers manage the Zone, living in Chernobyl town during 4-day and 15-day shifts. Another 3,800 personnel enter daily to work at the Chernobyl plant.After the accident, 188 nearby towns and villages were evacuated. Many were bulldozed. Some were simply abandoned. Beyond the Exclusion Zone are three further zones where radiation fell but evacuation was not mandatory. In Ukraine, this included 2,293 villages. The accident and indirect consequences continue to affect these residents physically, economically, socially and psychologically¬. Some overcome these difficulties; others surrender to them.How much radiation is safe? No one knows. Comprehensive medical research has never been done to determine the health effects of long-term radiation exposure. In the absence of facts, people believe rumors, propaganda, and their own first-hand experiences.Why do people stay? A lack of alternatives. A sense of duty. Deep ties to the land. Decent jobs. Because this is home.Learn more at:www.afterchernobyl.com