The Columbus Dispatch

Volunteers have hand in rebuilding Ukraine

Infrastruc­ture damage exceeds $100 billion

- Derek Gatopoulos and Vasilisa Stepanenko

NOVOSELIVK­A, Ukraine – As battles raged around Kyiv, one Russian advance was stopped in front of Maria Metla’s home. Artillery gutted most of the house, while the rest was pulverized by tank fire.

Metla, 66, is now counting on her neighbors to have somewhere to live this winter.

Crews of volunteers turn up on most mornings to prize away anything that can be reused – setting up neat piles of bricks, destroyed kitchen appliances for scrap metal, and chunks of insulation panels.

The salvaged material is reused to help rebuild homes destroyed along the perimeter of Russia’s failed attempt during the initial stages of the war to surround and capture Ukraine’s capital.

The village of Novoselivk­a, nearly 90 miles north of Kyiv, was a scene of intense fighting during the 36-day attack on the capital. Metal doors are buckled by bullet holes from heavy machinegun fire, and houses like Metla’s were smashed by ground and aerial bombardmen­t.

“We dragged what we could to the basement. Five bombs – one, two, three, four, five – exploded in the field behind us,” Metla said while standing in what used to be the living room of her destroyed home. She keeps a burned exercise bike and a religious icon of St. Nicholas as reminders of life before the war.

Ukraine’s authoritie­s said last month that the country had suffered more than

$100 billion – equivalent to two-thirds of its 2020 gross domestic product – in infrastruc­ture damage alone, but they estimate that the reconstruc­tion effort could cost more than seven times that amount.

Officials are appealing to Western countries to tap frozen Russian assets on top of what they are willing to donate to help pay for the bill.

Container homes from Poland are being set up near Novoselivk­a, a village filled with orchards, sunflower patches, and back gardens with chickens, outside the historic northern city of Chernihiv. But the scale of the damage has prompted scores of local initiative­s.

“In many other countries, if your home is destroyed, you might put up a ‘For Sale’ sign and move to another town. It’s not like that here,” said Andriy Galyuga, a local volunteer organizer. “People are very attached to where they

are from, and they don’t want to leave.”

Galyuga’s organizati­on, Bomozhemo, is in contact with similar initiative­s that have sprung up all around the Ukrainian capital.

At one smashed home, Galyuga bounded up a broken stairwell to direct a 25-member crew of volunteers loading salvaged cinder blocks onto a slide and determined­ly prying off constructi­on material with pickaxes and crowbars.

Children and retired women helped the effort watched by worried homeowner Zhanna Dynaeva, who was making food for the workers.

“I am so grateful to them. People around me have helped so much,” she said. “I’m hoping I can stay on my property, maybe in a makeshift home to start. I don’t know what will happen to us. Winter will be here soon. I just worry all the time.”

 ?? EVGENIY MALOLETKA/AP ?? Volunteers clear rubble on the second floor of Zhanna and Serhiy Dynaeva’s house, which was destroyed by Russian bombardmen­t, in the village of Novoselivk­a, near Chernihiv, Ukraine, on Saturday.
EVGENIY MALOLETKA/AP Volunteers clear rubble on the second floor of Zhanna and Serhiy Dynaeva’s house, which was destroyed by Russian bombardmen­t, in the village of Novoselivk­a, near Chernihiv, Ukraine, on Saturday.

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