The raging kidney failure epidemic as experienced by sugar cane plantation workers, cañeros, in the town of
Chichigalpa provides a clear example of the costs of business as usual. Chronic Kidney Disease, CKD, has claimed
between 2500-2800 lives in this municipality of 60,000 over the last 10 years, and thousands more are sick. The number of
affected in this municipality is at least 8 times the national average. No one has successfully told this story involving one of
the largest but most treatable epidemics in the Western Hemisphere. Leading epidemiologists have referred to this disaster
as a 'veiled genocide.'
La Isla, a community of 216 families has taken the name The Isle of Widows, as there are now 78 widows all due to CKD. The social costs of this loss of life are incalculable as poor, single mothers struggle to provide for their families. As if the difficulty of having to carry on with a terminal disease was not enough, the employer makes things even more dire for these workers by terminating the contracts of those who test positive for the illness, leaving them with little financial recourse. According to some of these workers a system of intimidation by private security and corrupt police and the dangling of offers of compensation in front of desperate families, is all that maintains precarious control over a volatile situation.
La Isla and the regional prevalence of CKD were the impetus for forming our NGO, La Isla Foundation. We simply felt that making a film wasn't enough.