Founded in 1970, Pripyat was the ninth atomgrad (“atom city”), a type of closed city in the Soviet Union of that time. It was made for the workers of Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. With modern amenities, the city ballooned to a population of nearly 50,000 by 1986. It was on April 26, 1986 that the Chernobyl nuclear disaster took place which led to the people being evacuated from the city on April 27. A highly radioactive area, the city is currently a ghost town known for ‘dark tourism’.
I was born in light.
They called me Pripyat, the city of the future. My foundations were poured in the hopeful 1970’s, when men believed that science could outshine the sun. My streets were wide and clean, lined with playgrounds. My air smelled of metal, rain, and new beginnings. The men and women who built me came with tired hands and bright eyes. They called me a “model city”, a symbol of progress, a home for those who worked at the Chernobyl Power Plant, the beating heart that gave me life.
In my initial years, I grew fast. Apartment blocks sprouted like concrete trees painted in yellows, whites, and greens. Children raced bicycles along my smooth sidewalks. I heard laughter in every stairwell, songs drifting from open windows, and the shuffle of chess pieces in the park. At night, the lights from the power plant spread across my horizon- steady, dependable, and warm.
I was proud. I was young. I was alive.
My people trusted me. They called me modern, safe and prosperous. They built a Ferris wheel in my amusement park. They built schools that echoed with lessons and chalk dust. In my kitchens, soup simmered while laughter filled the air. I remember the warmth of families gathered together, the smell of bread from my bakeries and the pride in the workers’ voices as they left for the plant each morning.
I thought it would last forever.
Then came April 26, 1986. A Saturday.
The night began like any other- quiet and calm- with the soft hum of electricity running through my veins. But then something changed. A tremor, a pulse, a strange vibration erupted from my heart, the Chernobyl Reactor No.4. I remember the moment the air itself seemed to flinch. It was not a roar, not at first. It was a shockwave that tore through the ground, rattling my windows and shattering my stillness. A blue light flared across the sky, bright enough to turn midnight into morning.
My heart was burning.
At first, no one understood. The workers at the plant stumbled through the smoke, trying to comprehend what had happened. My citizens woke up to confusion. It was not fear, just a strange glow on the horizon, dust in the air and metallic taste on the tongue. I heard whispers through open windows, “It’s fine. It’s under control.” Mothers brushed the ash from their children’s hair, not knowing it was poison. People gathered on bridges to watch the fire, to take photographs of the beautiful, deadly light.
I wanted to scream, but cities have no voices, only echoes.
By morning, the soldiers arrived. Trucks, buses, and masked men in strange uniforms. They told my people to pack quickly, “just for three days.” They brought nothing, some bread, a family photo and a cat that came instantly as they called. I watched as they left me in orderly lines, looking back at their home with tired eyes. I remember one small girl holding her doll tightly, whispering, “We’ll be back soon.” She never returned. Nor did anyone else.
The silence that followed was unbearable.
I tried to keep their presence alive, the smell of perfume in an empty apartment, the warmth of half drunk tea left on the table. But silence crept in, heavy and endless. Doors swung open in the wind. Curtains fluttered like ghosts. Radios buzzed without listeners. My rooms became tombs for memory.
Years blurred together. Within only a few springs, grass broke through the pavement. By the next decade, trees started finding the crevices to root in living rooms and wolves walked my streets.
Then the forest began to take me back. Grass pushed through my sidewalks. Birch trees sprouted in living rooms. Wolves, foxes, and owls made homes in my schools and factories. The Ferris Wheel, which used to spin with laughter, became my monument, rusted, golden in sunlight, turning only in dreams. The air hummed with something unseen, a soft invisible sickness that glowed in the soil.
Years passed, and I learned what it meant to decay beautifully. The rain painted rust on my metal bones. Moss softened my walls. I became both alive and dead, a monument and a ghost.
I still stand where I was once erected- not as a city of hope but as a city of echoes.
Writer : Eva Jain
Grade : 10 (Year 2025)
Place : Virginia, USA



