Documentary examines how toxic water at the nation’s largest Marine base damaged lives [View all]
This 2007 photo shows some of the older base housing at Midway Park neighborhood at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/documentary-reveals-how-contaminated-water-at-the-nations-largest-marine-base-damaged-lives/2012/01/10/gIQAfpy4GQ_story.html
Documentary examines how toxic water at the nations largest Marine base damaged lives
By Darryl Fears, Published: January 21
Mike Partain didnt believe the rumors about a place called Baby Heaven until he visited a Jacksonville, N.C., graveyard and wandered into a section where newborns were laid to rest.
Surrounded by hundreds of tiny marble headstones, he started to cry. A documentary film crew that followed him for a story about water contamination at Camp Lejeune heard his whimpers through a microphone clipped to his clothes. The crew dashed from another part of the graveyard and found him asking, Why them and not me?
The scene at Jacksonville City Cemetery is among the more poignant moments in the documentary Semper Fi: Always Faithful, about the men, women and children affected over three decades by contaminated water at the nations largest Marine base. The film made the short list of 15 documentary features being considered for an Oscar; the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will cut the list to five Tuesday.
Semper Fi follows Partain and Jerome Jerry Ensminger, the men credited with uncovering records showing that the amount of leaked fuel that led to water contamination was many times greater than the Marine Corps acknowledged.