"When there’s a funeral on the Spokane Indian Reservation, Harold Campbell puts on his grave-digging hat, collects his tools and heads to the cemetery.
Over the past 30 years, the volunteer gravedigger has helped prepare the final resting spots for hundreds of the tribe’s members. Death is a familiar presence to Campbell, who sits with grieving families and blesses burial plots with the fragrant smoke of sage and sweetgrass. Yet one aspect troubles him: Too many Spokane Indians die from cancer.
'I watch them die, young and old,'Campbell said. 'I think it’s caused by the radiation.”
The radiation is from the Northwest’s only open-pit uranium mines – an all-but- forgotten chapter of Washington’s Cold War history. Uranium ore was blasted out of the Spokane Reservation’s arid hillsides and sold to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. The truckloads of radioactive material that rumbled daily through the reservation helped build the country’s nuclear weapons arsenal. "
Becky Kramer reports for the Spokane Spokesman-Review June 5, 2011.
SEE ALSO:
"Canada's Port Hope Reaps Uranium's Rewards And Risks" (Reuters)
"Spokane Tribe Members Worked Gladly in Uranium Mines"
Source: Spokane Spokesman-Review, 06/06/2011