Hamilton Journal News

One year after liberation, Kherson holds on to hope

- By Samya Kullab

KHERSON, Ukraine — One year since Ukraine retook the city of Kherson from occupying Russian forces, residents have grown accustomed to hearing outgoing fire from the left bank of the Dnieper river, where Russian troops are positioned. They know that familiar crackle means they have seven seconds to find a shelter, or a sturdy wall to hide behind.

Their lives are mostly limited to the comfort of home and the necessity of the supermarke­t. Many shops are still shuttered. Municipal workers wear bullet-proof vests and wait to be dispatched to sweep up the rubble from yet another impact.

Between lulls of artillery fire coming from the river, which marks the contact line between battling armies in the Kherson region, Ukrainians venture out to buy food, bicycle down grassy residentia­l lanes or convene in the few restaurant­s that dare to remain open.

Marking the anniversar­y of Russia’s defeat on Nov. 11 is a bitterswee­t occasion, many residents say, as Ukraine’s counteroff­ensive grinds on without producing the spectacula­r gains many had hoped for. But those who stay are steadfast in their belief that one day normal life will return.

“When you have lived under occupation, you know what freedom means,” said Grigori Malov, who owns one out of three restaurant­s still operating in the city. “It’s why we have a special attitude toward the continued shelling. We can withstand it because we know how it could be worse.”

The flight of Russian troops from Kherson under prolonged Ukrainian assault a year ago was one of Ukraine’s biggest successes in the war and was seen as an inflection point. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy triumphant­ly walked the streets of the newly liberated city back then, hailing Russia’s withdrawal as the “beginning of the end of the war.” Many hoped it would serve as a springboar­d for more advances into occupied territory.

Today, both sides are locked in a stalemated battle of attrition.

On Saturday, a rainy and cloudy day, the atmosphere was muted and few residents came out to mark the occasion, fearing Russian attacks. A handful of people came draped in Ukrainian flags and stood for a while at a monument in front of the administra­tive building, then walked away.

Malov didn’t work during the nine months he lived under Russian occupation. After the city fell back to Ukrainian control, he opened his eatery, which contains a cafe on the top floor and a restaurant in the basement, to help bring the city back to life. Residents celebrate birthdays, clinking glasses, as the fighting continues only a few kilometers away.

Ukrainian soldiers, resting between front-line stints, are frequent patrons, and come to Malov’s restaurant to eat bowls of pasta or cheesy pizzas and to share a laugh. Sometimes Malov even organizes stand-up comedy nights, when he can find an entertaine­r.

“I think we are fulfilling an important function, we are giving people the opportunit­y to relax,” he said. “Now it’s even more important than before.”

The sounds of incoming and outgoing fire resound continuous­ly and residents have to organize their days in anticipati­on of them. They are most frequent in the morning and late afternoon, residents said. Air raid alarms echo almost incessantl­y, at all hours of the day.

Even as the city marked the anniversar­y of its liberation, one man was killed and three women were injured as Russian artillery hit the city’s homes.

Between 40-80 shells of different varieties land in Kherson city on a daily basis, said Oleksandr Tolokonnik­ov, a spokespers­on for the Kherson Regional State Administra­tion.

“Every day people must take into considerat­ion the shelling,” he said. Tolokonnik­ov was in the city on Nov. 12, one day after it was retaken, and recalled the joy of the crowds welcoming Ukrainian forces back.

A few days later, the shelling started, and it hasn’t stopped since, he said.

Security concerns aside, he says earning an income is another challenge for Ukrainians living in Kherson. There are no jobs for the nearly 71,000 residents in the city, which had a prewar population of 300,000. Most of those who remain are elderly, he said.

Dmytro and Olena were a rare sight: a young couple on a date. They went to the Kherson regional administra­tive building to hold up the Ukrainian flag and take photos ahead of the anniversar­y of the city’s liberation.

“It’s not safe in the city, maybe, but we are at home, we don’t want to move anywhere else,” said Olena. “We are spending time at home, we are trying to live, work and not leave.”

They spoke on the condition that only their first names be used because they feared Russian reprisals.

Konstantin Krupenko supervised municipal workers as they cleaned the streets, clearing fallen autumn leaves ahead of the anniversar­y celebratio­n. The men wore bulletproo­f vests, smoking in between hauling bags of foliage. Over the summer, Krupenko lost one of his workers who was struck by shrapnel from a Grad rocket.

 ?? EFREM LUKATSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Municipal workers decorate the wall of the regional administra­tion building with a huge national flag to mark one year since Ukrainian troops cleared the Russian army from Kherson.
EFREM LUKATSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS Municipal workers decorate the wall of the regional administra­tion building with a huge national flag to mark one year since Ukrainian troops cleared the Russian army from Kherson.

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