Boston Herald

Herald exclUsive: Ukrainian

Local media’s everyday coverage tells of courage, survival and atrocities

- By Joe Dwinell To donate to the journalism nonprofit, go to help.abo.media.

First in a series Journalist­s in war-torn Ukraine are telling stories of courage, survival and atrocities – often at the same time – while they themselves, their families and neighbors, are under siege by an invading Russian army.

They’re telling stories of a girl buying a used minibus to evacuate her parents out of Mariupol, refugees foraging for food among ruins and therapists helping children frightened by shattering bombs.

“We’re like a big family all working to keep local journalism alive in small cities and towns across Ukraine,” Yuliana Ohotnik said in a Zoom call with the Herald Wednesday from Kyiv.

She’s determined to keep writing and publishing vital informatio­n as the Russian army closes in. It’s all under the umbrella of the ABO Local Media Developmen­t Agency, a collaborat­ion between 45 newspapers and 300 journalist­s spread across Ukraine. They are linked by a common website — Svoi.global — and now the Boston Herald, Lowell Sun and Fitchburg Sentinel.

“The atrocities are true! Sometimes you just can’t edit and read it. Especially the stories of the children,” she added. “But I want the world to know about Ukraine and the beautiful people here.”

A colleague, editor Valentyn Vladimirov, says the post office and printing presses are back up as of early April giving his readers in rural Kaharlyk 50 miles south of Kyiv news of the invasion.

“We suffered through the pandemic and came back to work and that’s when the war started,” he said through a translator. “Our newspaper is often the only means of communicat­ion.”

He works through “six or seven air raid alarms a day” and he worries about the future. But like his president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, he’s resolute.

“All the nation is united, and you can feel the spirit,” said Vladimirov. “It gives you hope.”

Lexington’s Yanina Kisler, who escaped the Soviet Union in 1977 with her Ukrainian parents, is the lifeline between these heroic journalist­s. The electrical engineer is doing all she can to keep the local journalist­s reporting for all the world to read.

“I fear they are in great danger,” she said. “But it’s not just Ukraine that’s in danger. Ukraine is fighting a battle that is also the world’s battle.”

Ohotnik said life in Kyiv is “OK for now.” They have food and water. But rockets fired endlessly by Russia keep falling on the capital. She calls her team a “Media Battalion” on her Facebook page, where posts link back to carefree days in parks and visiting Berlin.

Sitting in her kitchen Wednesday, she didn’t smile as she spoke of some journalist­s in occupied regions who can’t do their jobs while under the gun.

She even pointed out the map that shows all the ABO Agency members does, in fact, include reporters in “New York.”

“Yes, there is New York in Ukraine. It’s a small city in Donetsk region. This is a village formerly known as Novgorodsk­oe, in July 2021 the Parliament of Ukraine returned its historical name – New York. That is how the village was called until 1951. And then the Soviet authoritie­s found this name too proWestern and ideologica­lly incorrect,” she explained in an email.

It’s now on the front lines of this war.

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 ?? Ap FilE ?? DESTRUCTIO­N: A journalist walks around after a Russian attack in Byshiv, in the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine on March 27.
Ap FilE DESTRUCTIO­N: A journalist walks around after a Russian attack in Byshiv, in the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine on March 27.
 ?? Ap ?? CHECKPOINT: Members of a pro-Russian militia patrol a road outside Mariupol, Ukraine.
Ap CHECKPOINT: Members of a pro-Russian militia patrol a road outside Mariupol, Ukraine.

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