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Climate change threatens Antarctic heritage - a film with kati Lindström and Dag Avango about the scientific results of the CHAQ2020 expedition to Antarctica. Photo: Jonathan Westin.
Read MoreClimate change threatens Antarctic heritage - a film with kati Lindström and Dag Avango about the scientific results of the CHAQ2020 expedition to Antarctica. Photo: Jonathan Westin.
Read MoreDuring 2015-2016, I had a privilege to work together with my colleagues from KAJAK, the Estonian Centre for Environmental History, and Estonian National Museum on a part of their new permanent exhibition on humans and environment. The part that I was responsible for, was a display on health and environment in Estonia in a historical perspective. Then it was a nerd choice in many ways - today it is in focus again. From the beginning of the epidemics, the images of our plague mask replica started spreading on social media. Yesterday, Alar Karis, the director of the Museum published a blog post on our materials related to small-pox mortality and early vaccination in Estonia.
Small-pox part of the display was in many ways exciting. Materials on small-pox vaccination campaigns were in many ways abundant but to grasp and visualise the context in many ways rather difficult as they principally consisted of books filled with the names of the vaccinated. But then there was an original knife for vaccination, as well as books that instructed how to do it - vaccination was carried out by local pastors, making thus sure that the vaccines also reached the remotest parts of the country. To convey that feeling and the process, we even staged a short film (freely watchable on youtube). Arguments against people who did not want to vaccinate their children remain eerily relevant for today. For a long time, we were searching for a photo of somebody with small-pox scars, but even Stalin’s photos are all retouched. In the end, University of Tartu’s History Museum found a scary series in their collection where you can see the deterioration of a small-pox patient day by day.
Choosing diseases that would be displayed at the exhibition was not so easy either. 1812 plague was something that we definitely wanted to include, but finding original objects from a disease outbreak more than 200years ago that had killed close to 80% of the population in some parts of Estonia, is very challenging. Since everybody was busy with surviving, nobody had time to actually keep track of how many people died, and most objects were destroyed, our knowledge is very scarce. In the end, the plague outbreak was represented with a short film of the archaeological excavation of Tallinn’s Santa Barbara graveyard and a running list of people who died of plague in Tallinn that keeps running and running without an end in sight. And the mask, of course, even though we have no historical documents that prove that exactly this was the design used in Estonia at that time.
This is not all of what we managed to fit into the small space dedicated to environmental history of epidemics in Estonia. There is water contamination by disposed medicine, development of quinine, emergence of sterilisation and hospital hygiene, and folk medicine, among other things. In the course of preparing it, I got to see the amazing medical and pharmaceutical collections of the Tartu University History Museum and stocked up a whole pile of material on other diseases that never made it to the exhibition and keep waiting for me to write about them.
Variatsioonid variolatsiooni teemal ehk „ilusad tüdrukud saavad paremini mehele kui rõugearmilised"
ERMi direktor Alar Karis. Ajal, mil uus viirushaigus on alustanud inimkonna proovile panemist, on arusaadavalt huvi selle teema vastu kõrgendatud. Selles blogiloos ongi jutuks nakkushaigused, täpsemalt võitlus rõugete vastu. Karmim haigus, mis omal ajal eestlasi maha niitis leetrite, düsenteeria, koolera, tüüfuse, sarlakite, malaaria ja rõugete kõrval, oli kindlasti katk.
I do think that one of the most important academic skills is to know your limits. To not speak about things you are not competent in. As you know, I am not always good at it: I have a very broad spectrum of topics I work with and am therefore guaranteed to step on a slippery ground sooner or later. However, in a crises, I think it is particularly important to avoid giving personal opinions on things where confusing or wrong information can lead to reduced compliance with life-saving regulations.
So I will not be posting opinions on quarantines, testing or other aspects on COVID-19 that demand medical knowledge. But I do think I have some knowledge about Japan and Fukushima (due to my involvement in the Nuclearwaters project), which is why I took on the challenge by Estonian daily Eesti Päevaleht to write something about Fukushima, Olympics and the Corona crises. This is a piece on crises communication. The main message is that delayed and contradicting messages reduce the credibility of the authorities and it is particularly dangerous in a situation where a crises unfolds rapidly and today’s information maybe entirely wrong by tomorrow. Even if the Olympics are safe in Japan, both in respect to Fukushima’s radioactivity (mind the Olympic torch route that passes at only 2,3 kms from the Fukushima Daiichi where the melted fuel is still lying around) or COVID-19, many of us would still have difficulties in believing it, because of government’s attempts to suppress information at multiple instances.
The text is of course in Estonian but for those of you who can read it, it is available HERE. (Siin on muidugi üks faktiviga ka: 2011. aastal ei astunud reha otsa mitte Abe, vaid Naoto Kan, kuid kui Abe 2012. aastal võimu üle võttis trampis ta sellel rehal veel suurem rõõmuga kui Naoto Kan kunagi trampinud oligi. Naoto Kanist sai aga tuumaenergia vastu võitleja)