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No more ‘Have a nice day’

Lviv, Ukraine, used to be a popular tourist destinatio­n; now war is here

- By Jane Arraf The New York Times

LVIV, Ukraine — When war came to Ukraine in February, Helen Polishchuk made some adjustment­s in the six-story bar she manages in central Lviv.

The Mad Bars House in Lviv’s historic central square stayed open, but served coffee and hot food instead of alcoholic drinks. They turned off the rock music. And as displaced Ukrainians began pouring into the city from places devastated by Russian attacks hundreds of miles away, she had instructio­ns for the wait staff.

“When guests leave the restaurant we normally say, ‘Have a nice day,’ ” she said. Instead she told them they could say something else, like “Glory to Ukraine,” or “We wish you blue skies.”

“Because to say ‘Have a nice day’ in this period is stupid,” said Polishchuk, 33.

Before the Russian invasion of Ukraine at the end of February, Lviv, a historic city just 40 miles from Poland, was a popular European tourist destinatio­n, with 2.5 million visitors a year and the biggest jazz festival in Eastern Europe.

Now, instead of tourists, there are displaced Ukrainians fleeing the war-torn east of the country. Lviv and its residents are learning to live with what most now believe will be many months of conflict, if not years.

Several Russian airstrikes have targeted infrastruc­ture here, including a rocket attack on a military training base in March that killed more than 30 people. Air raid sirens warning of Russian fighter jets breaching the airspace sound several times a day.

This small city, though, is still far from the active fighting that has devastated entire cities in the east of Ukraine.

The main challenge for Lviv has been to survive a wartime economy and manage the flood of displaced, traumatize­d people who are swelling the city’s population.

“We have learned to live in wartime,” said the city’s mayor, Andriy Sadovyi, who has recently lifted some municipal restrictio­ns, including allowing bars and restaurant­s to sell wine and beer, although not hard alcohol.

Sadovyi, a former businessma­n, said that six months before the Russian invasion, he tasked city officials with finding a way to keep water supplies flowing if the electricit­y failed. They started buying diesel generators, as well as stockpilin­g medical supplies, and topping up blood banks.

“If I had not been bracing my city for this situation, we would be in a catastroph­e right now,” Sadovyi, dressed in a black hoodie and black sneakers, said in an interview in the 19th-century Viennese-style City Hall. His office’s expansive stone balcony overlooked the market square, where displaced children shrieked with laughter and chased giant soap bubbles blown by a street performer.

Sadovyi said that civilians fleeing the fighting started coming into Lviv within hours of the invasion — 60,000 of them per day for the first three weeks. Now, with a new Russian advance expected, about 10,000 a day are arriving.

While many are heading across the border to Poland and other European countries, about 200,000 have remained, double the number the city administra­tion was expecting and almost one-third of the city’s prewar population of 700,000.

Those with money are renting apartments or staying in hotels. But tens of thousands more are in shelters, dependent on aid.

The Polish government has donated container homes for 1,000 people that are being set up in a city park. Others are being channeled from Lviv to other communitie­s in western Ukraine.

“This is a huge strain on our city,” said Sadovyi, 53. “Basically we have another city within our city.”

The war has sparked remarkable patriotism, and if some residents note that they can no longer find tables at their favorite cafés or restaurant­s because they are filled with displaced people, they tend not to complain. Guides lead displaced families on free tours of the city. Passengers on the tourist trolley leaving City Hall are not foreigners these days but Ukrainians.

At the Mad Bars House, Polishchuk said they planned to open a rooftop terrace, perhaps with nonalcohol­ic cocktails as well as wine and beer. They are bringing back more of their original 111-person staff.

She said the bar, which in normal times has a dance floor and serves increasing­ly potent drinks as patrons ascend its six stories, is losing money, but is committed to remaining open. On a recent Sunday afternoon, the first and second floors of the bar were full.

Management has replaced the classic rock entertaini­ng beer drinkers at the ground-floor bar before the war with Ukrainian songs, though on the floor serving wine to customers at tables, Frank Sinatra croons.

“We don’t want to pretend that nothing has happened, we understand that it’s a war,” Polishchuk said. “But we want to create an atmosphere of somewhere safe.”

On the menu, borscht, the beet soup that had few takers before the war is now the biggest seller. Polishchuk said it was patriotism and stress. “We understand that people want comfort foods,” she said.

“This is not the time for carrot juice and green salads,” Polishchuk said.

 ?? MAURICIO LIMA/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? A street artist entertains children with bubbles April 7, after the war started, in Lviv, Ukraine.
MAURICIO LIMA/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS A street artist entertains children with bubbles April 7, after the war started, in Lviv, Ukraine.
 ?? ?? A cafe April 9 in the old city of Lviv, Ukraine.
A cafe April 9 in the old city of Lviv, Ukraine.

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