Crying Earth Rise Up is a compelling story of the human cost of uranium mining and its impact on the water, land and people of the Great Plains.
Out on the American Great Plains, on the same land where Crazy Horse and Custer battled, a new kind of war is brewing--this time, over the exploitation of a natural resource. Crying Earth Rise Up follows concerned Great Plains residents as they seek answers to their questions about the potential threat posed by local uranium mining operations to their region's largest source of fresh drinking water. To the Lakota of the Pine Ridge Reservation, water is sacred--water is life. Discovering contamination in her water supply, Debra White Plume, mother and grandmother, sets out to raise awareness about the recent wave of cancer and birth defects afflicting tribal members-illnesses she is convinced are linked to nearby in situ leach uranium mining. For Elisha Yellow Thunder, a Lakota mother whose daughter was born with severe medical anomalies, the threat of water contamination is all too real. Yellow Thunder is a geology student who studies the relationship between the naturally occurring uranium in the area, uranium mining practices, and the poor condition of the water supply. Although the majority of residents in the small uranium mining town support the mine's activities, recent cases of cancer have raised questions about the safety of the mine among some townspeople.—Crying Earth Rise Up
No one understands the impact of contaminated water better than Elisha Yellow Thunder, a young Lakota mother who drank it during her first pregnancy. Elishas daughter, Laila, suffers from serious birth defectsand at 13 years old, currently fights for her life. Elisha studies geology at the local tribal college. She is conducting seminal research on naturally occurring and mined uranium on the Pine Ridge Reservation.
Debra White Plume, a Lakota elder, views nearby uranium mining operations as a source of water contamination and as an encroachment on the water rights of the Lakota Nation. She is the lead plaintiff in a case challenging the expansion of uranium mining in the region, and is motivated protect her community & treaty territory from exploitation of their natural resources by corporate interests.
With 70% of the worlds uranium resources located in the lands inhabited by indigenous peoples, this issue is especially relevant and pressing to these remote communities. Residents in the rural town near the mine question the safety having a uranium mine tap their most precious resource- clean water.
Crying Earth Rise Up explores the benefits of uranium mining versus the risks of contaminating our land, water and people.