Olympic surfing comes to a ‘poisoned’ paradise

Roniu Tupana Poareu, mayor of Teahupo‘o, Tahiti, is pictured May 3 as she visits the grave of her sister, who died this year of radiation-induced cancer. (Adam Ferguson/The New York Times)

Residents of Hao, French Polynesia, gather in April to welcome a French government delegation to French Polynesia. In 1974, a radioactive cloud from a French nuclear test drifted over Teahupo‘o, now the surfing venue for the Paris Games. Villagers still feel the effects. (Adam Ferguson/The New York Times)

Surfers in April in Teahupo‘o, Tahiti. In 1974, a radioactive cloud from a French nuclear test drifted over Teahupo‘o, now the surfing venue for the Paris Games. Villagers still feel the effects. (Adam Ferguson/The New York Times)

TAHITI, French Polynesia — Fifty years ago this July, as the waters of the South Pacific rushed toward the shores of Teahupo’o in a perfect, powerful curl, as they have always done, another wave visited the tiny hamlet. This time it was an invisible and airborne one: a surge of radiation escaping from a nuclear weapon test conducted by France in this far-flung reach of their republic.