Irish Daily Mail

My beautiful city is being destroyed but I had to come home to help

This Ukrainian solicitor fled after the war began two years ago but returned with Concern to provide social and legal protection to those in need

- By Olena Kovalenko in Kharkiv, Ukraine Olena Kovalenko is a protection officer with the Joint Emergency Response in Ukraine, run by Concern Worldwide and Welthunger­hilfe. See Concern.net/ where-we-work/ukraine

IF YOU are going to survive in Kharkiv, Ukraine, you need to keep your mobile phone with you at all times — 24 hours a day — with the volume turned up. Phone apps provide potentiall­y life-saving air-raid alerts. You can never switch off or relax. Almost every night, Kharkiv — Ukraine’s second city — is shelled by missiles or drones. Very often we get a warning of only 30-60 seconds that a missile has been launched, because the city is just 42km from the border with Russia.

When there is an alert, you have to move fast. Many residentia­l buildings do not have bomb shelters — the nearest to my apartment is the Metro, which is a five- to seven-minute walk.

There is often no time to run to a shelter, which is why most people in Kharkiv take cover in their bathroom or the corridor, or don’t have time to hide anywhere.

It’s impossible not to be on alert all day, every day. It is impossible to go to the theatre or a concert. Children do not go to school or kindergart­en. All mass gatherings of people are forbidden.

Sometimes it is impossible to go out in the evening unless it is to a basement. In some

The air-raid alarm goes off an average of five times a day

shops it is impossible to shop for a long time, because in Kharkiv the air-raid alarm goes off an average of five times a day.

It’s very painful to see a once-thriving city, famed as a cultural and scientific hub within Ukraine, turned into a half-empty and wounded one, with the homes and hearts of its inhabitant­s destroyed.

Where once there were two million inhabitant­s, now there are 1.2 million. Those who have remained have made a conscious decision to stay, no matter what. They love Kharkiv.

A few days ago, after a major fire in the city, when there was a need for clothes and food for the victims, there was a traffic jam with cars bringing aid in a steady stream. When you realise every day that you could be the next person to be attacked, it is hard to remain indifferen­t to other people’s problems. It is powerfully unifying.

I was one of those who left Kharkiv in March 2022 and sought sanctuary in France.

February 24, 2022, was the worst day of my life, the day my life collapsed. It was unclear what would happen next, whether Kharkiv would stay, whether Ukraine would remain independen­t. I was very scared for my family, friends and acquaintan­ces.

It was a day of exchanging calls and messages. Some people were leaving, some were going to the front, some people’s phones were not answered. For some, the other person would never answer again.

It was the day when it became clear that things were not going to be the same, that everything had changed.

At first, I wanted to stay in Kharkiv but the intensity of the shelling was incredible. It was unclear where the next missile would land. Houses in all districts were being hit, people’s lives were being destroyed, administra­tive buildings were falling. It seemed that there was no living place left in Kharkiv. So, at the end of March, I decided to leave.

I drove to Chernivsti in western Ukraine with my parents and sister, before crossing into Romania and flying to France — Wizz Air was providing free tickets for Ukrainians at the time.

I thought things would get better in a month or so, that Russia would withdraw and we would go home, so I didn’t take much with me. I went to France with a small backpack, a minimum of things, because I thought I would return soon, but I ended up staying in France for 15 months.

During some of that time, I was a recipient of aid from humanitari­an organisati­ons. I saw how dedicated these people were, but I also understood what it was like to be a recipient of aid, what was really important to you and what could wait.

After a few months in Roen in Normandy, I became co-founder and president of an associatio­n to help Ukrainians. We helped refugees in France, organised events for children and collected money, clothes and food to send to Ukraine. I worked as a solicitor in Kharkiv before the conflict. But my experience in France left me motivated to return to Ukraine to help people and work in Kharkiv Oblast. I had left in complete despair because everything I had was broken. I saw no prospects. I just hoped that everything would end soon.

I returned to Ukraine last June with the same hopes, but also with an understand­ing of what I should do and how I want to live. Concern

Worldwide and German humanitari­an organisati­on Welthunger­hilfe had set up a joint humanitari­an programme, the Joint Emergency Response in Ukraine (JERU). I joined as a protection officer. It was exactly the role I was looking for.

My job involves providing social and legal protection to vulnerable people to help them cope with challenges and stress. Working with a local partner, we run psychosoci­al support for children. Both psychologi­sts and teachers work with the children to help them catch up with their education.

We monitor the process of working with the children, communicat­e with the children and parents, discuss the topics of the sessions to make them as effective as possible, and together with our partner organise a comfortabl­e space for the children to forget about fears, explosions, worries, and just be children. It is a joy to see the great results of our work, to see children happy and excited to go to class.

We help children to have a childhood full of fun, games and laughter — that is extremely important. When parents see happy children, they become happier too. It is very noticeable and it is a real pleasure to do this work.

Last year, JERU supported over 16,500 adults and children to access essential psychosoci­al support. It provided multi-purpose cash payments to over 80,000 people. Working with nine national and local partners, we reached a total of 144,000 people with our emergency support, protection and livelihood­s programmin­g.

The work is funded by a number of internatio­nal donors, as well as donations from the Irish public and from the Community Foundation of Ireland.

Our partners have enabled us to expand our programmes to the north, east and south of the country where, alongside Poltava and Dnipro, we have implementa­tion in Mykolaiv, Zaporizhzh­a, Kharkiv and Sumy oblasts, where some of the most vulnerable population­s are residing in frontline regions and areas with internatio­nal borders to Russia.

In the eight months since I have returned to Ukraine, it’s striking how everything and everyone has been changed by what they have experience­d over the last two years. On the bad side, there is constant stress, insecurity and a deteriorat­ion in the standard of living for many people. Even our cities, which used to be cheerful, full, even overcrowde­d, are now empty and gloomy.

But there is also a positive side. We have learnt to adapt to constant challenges and emergencie­s, to react quickly, which will certainly be useful for the further developmen­t of ourselves and our Ukraine.

The war makes people change their priorities, to value life and their loved ones more, and not to put things off. It is very noticeable that people have started to doubt less and do more, to understand better who they are and what they can do, to support each other in difficult moments and to celebrate small victories together in anticipati­on of a big one.

I think what everybody misses is the peace — the time without air raids, moments of lightness, big

I have one big dream and that is victory

celebratio­ns, pre-war routines. Sadly, many people also miss their loved ones, some of whom they will never see again.

I also miss the opportunit­y to visit every corner of Ukraine, long walks at night in Kharkiv, the opportunit­y to meet with a large group of friends and the news that does not contain the death of children or young people.

When I look to the future I have one big dream, like everyone else, and that is victory. I really want it to come soon and for us all to live peacefully and happily, without worrying about our loved ones.

When the war is over, I will walk around Kharkiv at night, have a picnic with my friends in the countrysid­e, lie on the grass and look at the peaceful blue sky, and then go to Boryspil Airport and just sit in a coffee shop and admire the civilian planes flying back and forth, people enjoying meeting each other and not saying goodbye for the last time, people rushing to the check-in counter instead of taking shelter from the air raid.

I wish I could all implement such plans as soon as possible.

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 ?? ?? A taste of normality: A psychosoci­al support session for children in Kharkiv. Right, Olena Kovalenko
A taste of normality: A psychosoci­al support session for children in Kharkiv. Right, Olena Kovalenko
 ?? ?? Destroyed: A residentia­l building in Kharkiv following a Russian air strike on February 17
Rubble: Workers carry out search and rescue operations after a Russian attack on February 15. Above, two of the missiles used
Destroyed: A residentia­l building in Kharkiv following a Russian air strike on February 17 Rubble: Workers carry out search and rescue operations after a Russian attack on February 15. Above, two of the missiles used
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 ?? ?? In hiding: Children in an air raid shelter in Kharkiv
In hiding: Children in an air raid shelter in Kharkiv

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