brought or sold.

In their culture the land and marine

environment of the atoll are fully integrated with the human
members of the society.

It is an economic resource and more.

Ownership and use of the land reflects and is inextricably
linked to the social organization and to the culture as a whole.
lo be sure, their society has undergone and continuously is

undergoing change as a result of forces both within and without,
but the extraordinary significance of their being able to
resettle to the atoll discovered by their ancestors remains

constant.
Thus, the People of Enewetak are both the prime beneficiaries

and the prime risk-takers in this resettlement program.

And it

is in the assessment and, if possible, elimination of the radiobiological health risk that they are the most dependent upon the
_ United States government.

The Defense Nuclear Agency and the

comic Energy Commission have already devoted great amounts of

time and money to assessment and remedy of radiological problems
presented by this program, but more will have to be done and it

will have to be, done over a long period of time.

And throughout,

the People of Enewetak will rely upon the responsible agencies
of the United States government to do everything possible to
assess and minimize the risk due to the residual radioactivity
in the Enewetak biosphere.

Nothing said in these comments, for

example, should ever be taken as an assumption of riskby the

people of Enewetak.

When they left the Atoll in 1947 at the

insistence of the United States government it was radiologically
Safe.

That is the state in which it should be for their return.

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