Toronto Star

Olympian’s trek from back roads of Kenya to Ukrainian front lines

- SARAH GEARHART

Ukrainian marathoner Mykola Nyzhnyk was asleep in the Kenyan countrysid­e on Feb. 24 when he received a call from his pregnant wife, Olga. Alone in their apartment in Brovary, roughly 21 kilometres from Kyiv, she had heard two explosions, so strong that the windows were shaking, she said. Ten minutes later, a third blast drowned out the piercing siren of car alarms, and she described a growing cloud of smoke in the distance.

Nyzhnyk told his wife to gather their documents and whatever essentials she could fit into a backpack. By the time Olga left their home 30 minutes later to go to a friend’s place in Kyiv, she heard a fourth explosion.

The conversati­on changed everything for Nyzhnyk, who soon began a roughly 8,000-kilometre journey from the hard-packed dirt roads of Iten, Kenya, to his home in Ukraine, where he is answering his country’s call to serve in the war against Russia.

Nyzhnyk, 26, had arrived in Iten on Jan. 27 to train at high altitude in preparatio­n for the upcoming racing season and was planning to stay in Kenya until mid-March. His life in Iten, 7,800 feet above sea level, had been calm and peaceful. He woke up each day with the Great Rift Valley sunrise and ran for miles on auburn dirt roads that sliced through vast farmland. Afternoon naps were followed by a second training session, a routine that amounted to nearly 200 kilometres of running a week.

When Russia’s ground invasion of Ukraine began two weeks ago, he said he was too angry, too devastated, too distracted to train.

His training partner, Roman Fosti, a two-time Olympian from Estonia, tried to encourage him to run, hoping it would help him cope. But “he was so broken,” Fosti said.

When the war began, Nyzhnyk received a phone call from the National Guard and was ordered to return to Ukraine. The country’s airspace is closed to civilian flights, so it took Nyzhnyk more than a week to navigate a maze of travel logistics and border restrictio­ns. He left Iten last Friday.

“It’s my duty,” said Nyzhnyk, who is a first sergeant in the National Guard of Ukraine, part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. “I am very motivated to defend my country.”

Nyzhnyk voluntaril­y joined the National Guard in 2016, and he represents its sports club in domestic racing competitio­ns. The club comprises 150 of the country’s top athletes, 32 of whom competed at the Tokyo Games. In times of peace, Nyzhnyk doesn’t actively serve, “but in conditions of war, we must defend our country like all military,” he said.

To get from Kenya to Ukraine, Nyzhnyk flew from Nairobi to Budapest, where volunteers in Hungary helped him cross the border. A friend met Nyzhnyk in Khmelnytsk­yi and took him to a train bound for Kyiv so he could retrieve important documents and his car at his apartment on the outskirts of the city before meeting Olga. He had hesitated with the decision on arrival in Ukraine.

“It is unknown when we will be able to return there again,” he said, referring to his home outside Kyiv. “I thought about the route while I was still in Kenya, but changed it when I was travelling to Ukraine because the situation here is not simple and difficult to plan everything.”

“I’m not nervous, and I do everything without panic,” Nyzhnyk said Sunday, as he sat in a crowded yet eerily quiet metro station turned shelter while he waited for curfew to end at 7 a.m.

When he left Brovary for Lviv on Sunday, he drove two women and a two-year-old boy who were escaping Kyiv for a more secure region. The route, which should take six hours, turned into a 26-hour journey through 19-kilometre-long traffic jams. He stopped several times to sleep in his car.

“I’m very tired,” Nyzhnyk wrote in a text exchange late Monday. “For the last four days, I slept only three to four hours on average.”

He was reunited with Olga for one day in Lviv. Olga, who is 32 weeks pregnant, is also a profession­al runner and competed at the 2012 London Olympics in the 10,000 meters. She opted not to leave Ukraine to be close to family. And, she said, “This is my homeland. I don’t want to run away.”

Nyzhnyk was to report to his military unit Tuesday, and he is prepared to resist Russian forces for as long as required. “If I need to take up arms, I will do it,” he said. “Ukrainians will cope with everything. We will not lose hope and will fight to the end.”

He hopes turmoil will have ceased by the time his wife gives birth to their first child in mid-April.

“I would like to give her the name of Myroslava,” Nyzhnyk said of his future daughter. “It means peace.”

It’s my duty. I am very motivated to defend my country.

MYKOLA NYZHNYK UKRAINIAN MARATHONER

 ?? MATT FOX THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Mykola Nyzhnyk, 26, had arrived in Iten, Kenya, on Jan. 27 to train at high altitude in preparatio­n for the upcoming racing season. When the war began, he received a call from the National Guard and was ordered to return to Ukraine.
MATT FOX THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Mykola Nyzhnyk, 26, had arrived in Iten, Kenya, on Jan. 27 to train at high altitude in preparatio­n for the upcoming racing season. When the war began, he received a call from the National Guard and was ordered to return to Ukraine.

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