Blue Sand
The headline was striking sixty odd years later
The dust was said to be returning to sender
Swirling dervishes on magic carpets, a blanket of fine particles
Radiation straight from the souk, the message in a bottle
A sixties affair held, not in Provence,
but rather in the Sahara
Uncharted territory
in what they then called French Algeria
A convenient location,
just a few Berber nomads around at best
The fruits of settler colonialism,
a prime spot for a nuclear test
A case of droit de seigneur, this was the desert after all
Proud of his entrée to the nuclear club was General de Gaulle
Still, it's not something that one could sweep under the rug,
this thing
Indeed, the test rather embodied a literal carpet bombing
First, the sharp flash of the detonation
Then, later, shock waves and the almighty sound
The scientists marveled at the novel reaction
The blueish fire that preceded the mushroom cloud
Ground zero, the impact crater, the hole in the dunes
The military had assigned a codename: Gerboise Bleue
The desert rodent of Reggane would be baptized in blue
The blue of the tricolor harkened to Saint Martin de Tours
In the aftermath, as expected, came the fallout in all its forms
The uproar was swift,
later tests would have to be moved underground
Expressions of surprise
that radiation would drift west and south
Significant traces detected
in Upper Volta, Ghana and even Senegal
Ballistic rockets launched primed for nuclear payloads
The initial fear was of fission and Strontium 90 isotopes
Decay was all, the main byproduct was rather Caesium
It is an ill wind that blows no good, this reckoning
We are all casualties in the torrid zone of this triangle of fire
That, in a new century, nature had decided to share the wealth
Donations of micro doses spreading irony across the land
A radioactive gift to posterity, a legacy of blue sand
After: Irony as Saharan dust returns radiation from French nuclear tests in the 1960s (March 1, 2021)
Blue Sand, a playlist
A soundtrack for this note. (spotify version)
- You Dropped A Bomb On Me by Gap Band
- Ill Wind by Ben Webster
- Midnite Blue by Count Basie
Taken from The Complete Atomic Basie, the album cover is telling - Dust by Van Hunt
- Inherit the Wind by Wilton Felder
- Dust in the Wind by Eric Benet
- Ill Wind by Lee Morgan
- Oh Lord Don't Let Them Drop That Atomic Bomb On Me by Charles Mingus
- Ill Wind by Milt Jackson
- Ill Wind (You're Blowin' Me No Good) by Ella Fitzgerald
...
The Wife's history of Atomic Junction dug up lots of interesting material. Here's a 1960 speech by by Tawia Adamafio denouncing French Nuclear Tests in the Sahara. See also a few more clippings from Ghanaian newspapers of the time.
File under: nuclear, France, violence, colonialism, war, environment, Algeria, irony, culture, observation, science, weapons, Africa, politics, power, perception, public health, poetry, Observers are worried, toli
Writing log: December 16, 2021
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