Rome News-Tribune

Grief, pride and a vow to win: Ukraine marks a year of war

- By Laura King

KYIV, Ukraine — Church bells tolled, weeping mourners embraced and blue-andyellow national flags fluttered Friday as Ukraine marked the first anniversar­y of a Russian invasion that triggered a cataclysmi­c war but also galvanized a powerful sense of common purpose among the country’s people.

“We clearly understood that for each tomorrow, you need to fight,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told his compatriot­s in a video address commemorat­ing the Feb. 24, 2022, invasion that triggered Europe’s largest land battle since World War II. “And we fought.”

Across the country, Ukrainians looked back on the year with a mixture of sorrow and pride.

“No one was expecting Ukraine would still be standing today,” said Oleksandr Azarov, a 39-year-old emergency services worker from the northern city of Chernihiv. “We are grieving, all of us, but we hope and trust that victory will be ours.”

The war’s repercussi­ons have spread far beyond Ukraine. Although the NATO alliance grew in cohesivene­ss, inflation worsened and energy woes beset the United States and Europe, though they have eased in recent months. Deep fissures were laid bare between wealthy industrial­ized democracie­s and the global south, which has largely taken an arms-length approach to the conflict.

And Russian President Vladimir Putin’s nuclear saber-rattling — most recently exemplifie­d by his announceme­nt that he would suspend participat­ion in Moscow’s last nuclear arms-control pact with Washington — inspires periodic dread around the world.

At a rare news conference, Zelenskyy implored Ukraine’s allies to remain united “like a fist,” saying Ukraine could win the war if the West provides sufficient military support.

Some items on Kyiv’s weaponry wish list are materializ­ing: Poland’s president, Andrzej Duda, said Friday

that the first Polish-provided Leopard battle tanks had arrived in Ukraine, but he did not provide a specific number.

Along a battlefron­t stretching for hundreds of miles in Ukraine’s south and east, months of grinding winter combat have failed to yield much of an advantage for either side, following a string of Ukrainian victories in the late summer and early autumn. Ukraine’s military said that as the anniversar­y approached, Russia stepped up battlefiel­d activity in at least two dozen towns and villages along the front lines, but without appreciabl­e gains — a stalemate that some analysts warn could persist into the second year of combat.

In cities and towns far from the fighting, many Ukrainians said they were doing their best to create some sense, however illusory, of normal life for themselves and their families.

In the capital, Kyiv, people clustered in coffeehous­es, hung laundry out to dry,

boarded rattling subway trains and hurried along city sidewalks, bundled against a penetratin­g winter chill. Air raid sirens remained quiet, despite worries that Russia would unleash a barrage of missiles and drones on the one-year anniversar­y of its “special military operation.”

“We must not be crushed by the situation,” said Alina Bavisheva, a 31-year-old clothing designer who was out shopping with an equally glossy-haired friend in an upscale Kyiv department store. “We have to recover, we have to live.”

The hallmarks of a wartime capital, though, were unmistakab­le: sandbagged statuary, rusted “hedgehog” tank traps, checkpoint­s on roads leading to the city. Occasional passersby carry on their faces or bodies evidence of the conflict engulfing their country: a telltale limp because of a prosthetic leg, a raw scar on a jawline.

Zelenskyy, the 45-year-old president who has emerged as an unexpected­ly Churchilli­an wartime leader, made a point of appearing at an open-air ceremony in central Kyiv to honor fallen troops. Participan­ts observed a moment of silence for slain civilians and soldiers alike, who number in the tens of thousands.

In Bucha, a garden suburb northwest of Kyiv whose name became known the world over as the site of horrific atrocities against civilians during a monthlong Russian occupation last spring, townspeopl­e gathered at the whitewashe­d, gilt-domed St. Andrew’s Church, now a museum documentin­g the town’s suffering.

“There were so many bodies,” said the church’s bellringer, 87-year-old Petro Potapenko, gesturing toward what had been a sandy trench where dozens of corpses were unearthed after the Russians retreated from their attempt to seize Kyiv.

Many Ukranians had braced for the possibilit­y of a hail of missiles and drones Friday, possibly in the same predawn hours that marked the joining of battle when Kyiv and other cities came under bombardmen­t and Russian troops moved in from the north, south and east.

But by late afternoon, as darkness fell, there had not been even one air alert in Kyiv.

Some precaution­s were put in place surroundin­g the anniversar­y date. Schools were advised to hold classes remotely, and large public gatherings were discourage­d. In particular­ly dangerous areas, such as the southern city of Kherson, recaptured by Ukraine in November but still subject to airborne attacks, people were advised to stay inside.

Four days after a surprise visit to Kyiv by President Joe Biden, the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Bridget Brink, hailed the country’s struggle — buoyed by billions of dollars’ worth of Western military aid — as an inspiratio­n for the democratic world.

“A year ago today, Russia tried to change borders by force, take away your liberty and break your will,” she said in a statement. “We refuse to accept a world governed by fear and force: we stand with Ukraine.”

 ?? Andy Buchanan/AFP via Getty Images/TNS ?? People hold placards at a gathering in George Square, in Glasgow on Friday, on the first anniversar­y of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Andy Buchanan/AFP via Getty Images/TNS People hold placards at a gathering in George Square, in Glasgow on Friday, on the first anniversar­y of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
 ?? Roman Pilipey/Getty Images/TNS ?? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks to the media during a press conference as Ukraine marks one year since Russia’s large-scale invasion, on Friday, in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Roman Pilipey/Getty Images/TNS Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks to the media during a press conference as Ukraine marks one year since Russia’s large-scale invasion, on Friday, in Kyiv, Ukraine.

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