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Lighter than Orange – The Legacy of Dioxin in Vietnam

Germany

Matthias Leupold Photographer / Professor

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    “It smelled sweet,” one woman remembered, “like ripe guavas.” Others remember it hanging in the air like a thick fog.

    Some say when aircrafts sprayed, it looked like stripes of powder decorating the sky.

    Yet their poetic observations are in stark contrast to the devastating power of Agent Orange and the painful consequences the Vietnamese people would soon experience. In LIGHTER THAN ORANGE ten North Vietnamese veterans tell about their memories of the war and Agent Orange as well as the struggles they have faced as a consequence of both.

    There are an estimated more than 3 million victims of Agent Orange living today. Phuc and his wife lived in the province Phu Tho after returning from the war.

    Thereafter they had a child who was deformed at birth and died soon after.

    The same happened with their second child.

    So, together they made the most difficult decision of their lives: to remain childless. Another couple gave birth fifteen times, and only three of their children survived past infancy.

    They say years passed before they had any idea that what they were experiencing was the consequence of their exposure to the defoliants sprayed during the war.

    They say they never imagined it could affect humans in this way. The documentary LIGHTER THAN ORANGE reveals a political failure through individual biographies.

    It depicts the fates of millions Vietnamese veterans who have been victims of Agent Orange.

    Due to exposure to dioxin-based herbicide Agent Orange used during the Vietnam War, veterans brought home a change in their DNA.

    This change having been passed down through the generations, their children are still suffering from incurable illnesses and debilitating deformity today. The documentary of an independent filmmaker is part of an international project wich will initiate a concept containing ten billion dollars in 2015 by means of a memorandum (organised and supported by the Rachel-Carson-Center, LMU Munich, political U.S.

    foundations and international institutions).

    The planned project will provide medical treatment as well as research and execution of decontamination of the soils.

    http://www.lighterthanorange.com