Area exhibits will focus on nuclear issues by Aly Brown Iowa City Press-Citizen Iowa residents can learn more about America’s current nuclear proliferation and the hazards of nuclear weapons at several multimedia exhibits throughout Johnson County from August through September. Iowa Physicians for Social Responsibility representatives sponsored “Nuclear Neighborhood, 11,000 Generations” — an exhibit combining art, history, and science — to start a conversation about our nuclear history and future.
The exhibit will combine paintings, watercolors, posters, and poetry with historical artifacts such as maps and letters from Iowa nuclear assembly workers and veterans dating to the 1940s.
Maureen McCue, Iowa Physicians for Social Responsibility coordinator and university Global Health Studies professor, said “Nuclear Neighborhood, 11,000 Generations” is meant to spark a conversation.
“To begin to talk about it again, and begin to ask whether or not we’re going in a direction we need to go, for ourselves, our children, and future generations.”
McCue compared our current focus on expanding nuclear power and medicine while preventing weapons proliferation to the Sword of Damocles, a Greek myth emphasizing the balance between great power and extreme peril.
“We’re not going to get rid of nuclear power overnight,” she said. “But when you’re in a hole, stop digging.”
The project will include six displays at UI’s Hardin Medical Library, the Iowa City Public Library, Solon Public Library, and the Iowa Memorial Union. McCue said each exhibit will focus on different issues within nuclear proliferation.
McCue said the Hardin Medical Library will focus on nuclear power’s health implications and the history of nuclear plant workers in Iowa.
“It’ll show the kinds of illnesses and chronic morbidity that they suffered working in the nuclear assembly plant,” she said. “People forget you don’t get weapons without workers.”
McCue said in order to cater to the higher population of children visiting the Solon Public Library this time of year, the exhibit will feature children’s projects and art work. Children submitted posters reading “Bombs Stink Worse than Pigs” and “Make Ice Cream Not Bombs,” which will be shown alongside university associate art professor Susan White’s color washes of the Fukushima disaster aftermath.
The Iowa City Public Library will explore the community and environmental impacts of nuclear energy, featuring displays on the airborne and waterborne pollution resulting from the Hanford Site, a mostly defunct nuclear production complex and artifact of the Manhattan Project in Washington state.
During September, the Iowa Memorial Union will host artwork, poetry, and other materials produced by university faculty, students and staff.
John Rachow, assistant clinical professor at the university College of Medicine and Iowa Physicians for Social Responsibility member, said the exhibit combines art, history, and science to allow viewers to experience the message, rather than just reading facts and figures out of a textbook.
“We wanted to explain a little bit of a different human perspective on the very complex issue of radiation and health,” he said. “To go back 100 years when the knowledge of radiation and what it was and its effect on human health and living organisms was only in its early stages.”
The exhibit will begin in August to remember the 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Rachow said he hopes the exhibit will bring awareness to what he sees as the lack of long-term nuclear waste storage worldwide, the dangers resulting from natural disasters as seen at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear meltdown, and the real threat of nuclear winter.
“How do you think about something that if it happens, it would be a kind of Armageddon, a kind of unnatural disaster we have never seen?” he asked. “It’s not happening today, but it’s such an existential threat to all of us. It’s very important.”
A celebratory opening reception will be held at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Room A of the Iowa City Public Library. Rachow said the art exhibit will be joined by Thursday night film screenings and Tuesday night lectures throughout August at the Iowa City Public Library.
Rachow said the hazards of nuclear power are “broad, yet invisible,” and the public can help just as much as medical professionals.
“It begins with education and awareness,” he said. “It isn’t penicillin that is going to save civilization. It will be the people getting together in small groups and talking.”
To learn more about the exhibits or the lecture and film series, visit www.psriowa.org.
Reach Aly Brown at 887-5413 or abrown11@press-citizen.com
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Nuclear Disarmament Exhibition Dunedin August 5 – 9
Exhibition on Nuclear Disarmament to open in Dunedin Scoop, 29 July 2013, SGI Exhibition on Nuclear Disarmament to open in Dunedin as a part of 68th Hiroshima day commemorations August 5 (mon) – 9 (fri)
The National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies (NCPACS) will host the opening of an antinuclear exhibition“Everything You Treasure: For a World Free from Nuclear Weapons” from August 5 (Mon) to 9 (Fri) at the Otago University Library LINK.
The exhibition, jointly created by Soka Gakkai International (SGI) and the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), was first launched at the 20th World Congress of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) in Hiroshima in 2012. The exhibition has since been shown in Bahrain and later at the UN Office at Geneva, during the Second Preparatory Committee (PrepCom) for the 2015 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference in April of this year.
The new exhibition consists of 40 panels covering nuclear weapons issues from 12 perspectives: humanitarian, environmental, medical, economic, human rights, energy, scientific, political, spiritual, gender, generational and security. Peter Mauer, President of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) stated, “it is astounding that states had never come together to address the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons, including their long-term health and climate effects.”
Professor Kevin Clements, Director of NCPACS comments, “We urge as many people as possible to come and see this exhibition. New Zealand should not rest on its antinuclear laurels. It’s important that we understand the continuing threats from nuclear weapons and the need for their total abolition. In particular, we want to make sure that the current generation of young people and students know as much about these issues as did their parents.”
Students of NCPACS are also planning to visit the local schools to talk about nuclear issues.
The exhibition is just one part of the Hiroshima Day commemorations the Centre will organize in Dunedin together with other community groups. A peace vigil and a public debate “that New Zealand is safer out of ANZUS and Nuclear Free” will take place on the 6th of August (Peace Vigil at the Peace Pole from 11am, Public Debate in Archway 3 from 5:15pm).
Exhibition Venue: The Otago University Link (Between the university central library and the university food-court. Entrance across the road from the Otago Museum)
August 5 (mon) – 9 (fri)
Hold up to plan to ship radioactive steam generators across Great Lakes
Nuclear power plant puts radioactive shipping plans on hold Plan to move 16 radioactive steam generators was met with strong opposition CBC News Jul 28, 2013
A plan to ship 16 radioactive steam generators through the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River for recycling in Sweden has been cancelled after delays caused by public opposition.
An agreement was reached in 2009 between Bruce Power in Tiverton, Ont., and Swedish company Studsvik, but Bruce Power president Duncan Hawthorne said the plans have been put on hold to allow further discussion with First Nations, Métis and other groups.
The move has been strongly opposed by aboriginal groups, the Bloc Quebecois, the NDP and a number of community and environmental organizations over the past two years.
Emma Lui of the Council of Canadians said there are many concerns, but the “big one” is the possible threat to the Great Lakes if something went wrong with the shipment.
Kahnawake Mohawk Council spokesman Joe Delaronde said the change in plans shows that public pressure can keep companies like Bruce Power in check.
“We’re pretty happy that they’ve done the right thing here. And, when they come up with other options, I’m sure they’ll be publicized as well,” Delaronde said…..
“You can’t keep this kind of thing secret and try to sneak it through……
A plan to ship 16 radioactive steam generators through the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River for recycling in Sweden has been cancelled after delays caused by public opposition.
An agreement was reached in 2009 between Bruce Power in Tiverton, Ont., and Swedish company Studsvik, but Bruce Power president Duncan Hawthorne said the plans have been put on hold to allow further discussion with First Nations, Métis and other groups.
The move has been strongly opposed by aboriginal groups, the Bloc Quebecois, the NDP and a number of community and environmental organizations over the past two years.
Emma Lui of the Council of Canadians said there are many concerns, but the “big one” is the possible threat to the Great Lakes if something went wrong with the shipment.
Kahnawake Mohawk Council spokesman Joe Delaronde said the change in plans shows that public pressure can keep companies like Bruce Power in check.
“We’re pretty happy that they’ve done the right thing here. And, when they come up with other options, I’m sure they’ll be publicized as well,” Delaronde said.
“You can’t keep this kind of thing secret and try to sneak it through…….
Time to counter the exploitation of indigenous peoples
Canada’s history awash with crimes against First Nations Rabble Ca By Gerry Caplan
| July 29, 2013 “………There’s been a lot of talk recently of Canada being guilty of genocidal policies against its Indian population. One Globe and Mail op-ed. gave several shake-your-heads examples of these, concluding with “the uncomfortable truth that modern Canada is founded upon ethnic cleansing and genocide.” I teach about the 1948 UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide, and even a quick glance at the document reveals that such accusations are by no means reckless hyperbole. Since we began as a nation, as the Assembly of First Nations said last week, we have treated aboriginals as “less than human.” That’s precisely what allows genocidal policies to be pursued.
Heavy stuff, for sure. And extremely un-Canadian. Aboriginal-wise, I’m afraid, the conceit of Canada as the caring-sharing peaceable kingdom has been plain old malarkey from Day One. As the record makes only too clear, the right words would actually include racist, cruel and hypocritical.
So those with power keep repeating century-old mistakes, mostly because they refuse to change the basic relationship between whites and Indians (to use Tom King’s terms) to one of respectful partnerships between equals. That’s what should make us shudder and shake our heads, but it hardly counts as new news.
And yet, besides the monotonous horror stories, there are all the many positive initiatives across the country that rarely make the news at all, accounts of First Nations people who are fighting back thoughtfully, peacefully, creatively. They’re mad as hell and clever as hell and won’t take it any more. Now all they need is for the rest of us to join in putting pressure on a government that’s devoted to the rights of energy and mining companies instead of the rights of our founding peoples…..
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