AFP via Getty Imagesin Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union, crashed and “released massive amounts of radioactive material into the environment,” as the Nuclear Regulatory Commission described it. They reported that about 350,000 people in the vicinity were evacuated as a result.
To “do something good” with her second chance at life, Inna Braverman studied political science, thinking, “maybe, you know, I can make peace in the Middle East, the innocence of a young person, when I finish.” “I went for wave energy just because I saw a field that has huge demand, that has huge potential for positive impact on the world, and that nobody's succeeding in,” Braverman said inon Electric Ladies Podcast. “So that kind of was for me, I don't know, maybe a feeling of destiny here. I got a second chance in life and maybe I can make something for the first time in the world, so maybe my second chance will be kind of, you know, worthwhile.