NEW YORK, USA -- Families walk their children to school. Teenage girls  smile backstage before a concert. Couples work out at a gym not far from  villages where subsistence farmers draw well water and raise crops.
Welcome to the present-day Chernobyl region.
A quarter-century  before a tsunami triggered a nuclear crisis in Japan, the world's  attention was riveted by the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant as it spewed  radioactive material across much of the Northern Hemisphere.
A  generation later, thousands of people live in the region — and even  still work at the disabled plant.
Freelance photojournalist  Michael Forster Rothbart wanted to understand why anyone would choose to  stay in the radioactive area, so he went to Ukraine on a Fulbright  Scholarship in 2007 and for two years lived 10 miles south of the  Chernobyl "exclusion zone."
He got to know the people whose lives  changed on April 26, 1986, when the No. 4 reactor blew up 60 miles from  Kiev, Ukraine's capital.
His "Inside Chornobyl" exhibit, a  photographic collage that focuses on five families who work in the  Chernobyl zone, opens Sunday at the Ukrainian Museum in New York. A  parallel exhibition of his work, "After Chornobyl," opens at the  Ukrainian Institute of American on Tuesday.
Both run until May 8.
"People  told me 'I'd rather die here than live anywhere else,'" he said of the  3,800 people who work at the plant, many of whom live in Slavutych, 30  miles to the east.
"In this country we're so mobile that it's  hard for us to conceive that people have such deep ties to the land and  community that they would stay in the face of such adversity," he said.  Some stay for lack of alternative or a sense of duty, others because  they have decent jobs or simply because it's home, Forster Rothbart  said.
Chernobyl workers make about $500 a month, about twice the  country's average monthly wage.
Many of Forster Rothbart's images  belie the enormity of the 25-year-old catastrophe. The explosion  released about 400 times more radiation than the U.S. atomic bomb  dropped over Hiroshima. Thousands of children developed thyroid cancer,  and other possible health problems are still being documented.
But  how many people died is still debated. Several international agencies  say 50, and others predict radiation-related deaths will eventually  climb into the thousands.
The plant stopped making electricity in  2000, but nuclear fuel remains on site. The Chernobyl plant lies within  the exclusion zone, where workers live for two weeks at a time because  of high contamination.
The zone also is home to some 400 elderly  people who returned to their ancestral homes despite government's  warnings to stay out. Another 3,800 people work at the plant.
For  "Inside Chornobyl," which uses the Ukrainian spelling, Forster Rothbart  focused mainly on those who commute daily by train from Slavutych. It's  a city of 25,000 people built after the accident for displaced workers  from Pripyat, which was abandoned after the explosion and is now an  eerie ghost town a mile from the plant.
Some are involved in a  project to build an enormous cover for the reactor building intended to  block fallout from escaping when the reactor is disassembled sometime in  the future.
Forster Rothbart said his goal was to go beyond the  "sensationalist approach" that showed the suffering but obscured the  complexity of how displaced communities adapt and survive.
"I  sought to create more nuanced portraits of these communities. Their  suffering, of course, but also their joy, beauty, endurance and hope,"  he said.
People expect the Chernobyl zone "to look like a bombed  out crater," he said, but a walk along the Pripyat River is like any  scenic area of Ukraine.
The difference is that the radiation —  invisible to the eye — "is all around you," he said.
His photo  montage is combined with text mounted on large vinyl banners. Among the  most chilling images is that of two dolls lying on a shattered  kindergarten windowsill in Pripyat. A caption quotes the school's former  director: "I only went back once. I couldn't stop crying."
Another  is that of the plant's burned out fourth-block control room, where a  combination of design flaws and human error triggered the accident.  Another photo shows three workers checking their hands and feet for  radioactive contamination before heading home.
The exhibition  juxtaposes images of people's working and private lives. It shows Oksana  Rozmarisa operating machines that measure radiation levels in the plant  and her husband, Leonid, as a shift supervisor there.
The photos  also portray the couple's passion for bodybuilding. In one image,  Leonid holds up his wife in one arm and his son in the other.
In  other photos, engineer Tanya Bokova poses at the plant's decommissioning  office and at home with her husband. Their smiling faces make clear the  Chernobyl disaster does not overshadow their lives.
"I feel  happy because I have a family, a beloved husband, parents together. I  have a good job, which I go to with delight," she is quoted as saying in  a photo caption.
As for Forster Rothbart, he said, "The story  seemed important enough that I was willing to undertake some risk."
"In  this country, every day people die in car crashes. We're used to it and  so we don't even think about it. The same is true in Chernobyl.
Radiation  is just part of living there," he said. "Everyone in Slavutych knows  someone who has cancer or who died of cancer. It's sort of a veil of  normality over this very troubling background."
He said it was  impossible not to draw parallels between the Chernobyl accident and  Japan's crippled nuclear plant.
"They'll be forming a similar  exclusion zone 25 years from now; they'll still be dealing with the  consequences just like the people in Chernobyl are today," he said.
The  exhibit is presented jointly by the museum and the Children of  Chornobyl Relief and Development Fund.
Forster Rothbart, 39,  lives in Oneonta, N.Y. He has done freelance work for The Associated  Press and other media outlets. Among his other projects is "Fracking  Pennsylvania," which explores the effects of natural gas drilling on  rural communities.
 
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