Manchester Evening News

Women fighting Ukrainian war in Manchester

CULTURAL CENTRE VOLUNTEERS DOING THEIR BIT TO HELP

- By ETHAN DAVIES

A GROUP of Ukrainian women in Manchester have banded together to help their war-ravaged country and to make sure youngsters don’t forget their homeland or culture.

It’s been almost 70 days since Russia invaded Ukraine, with a brutal war raging across much of the country.

And volunteers from the Ukrainian Cultural Centre in Cheetham Hill are ferrying donations to the conflict, organising Saturday schools for children to keep their language alive, and running a museum celebratin­g their heritage.

The centre, on Smedley Lane, is now also the home of a refugee shop, where displaced people can collect items free of charge and was visited by Greater Manchester mayour Andy Burnham last week.

Mr Burnham said he wanted to keep the plight of the Ukraine in the public eye.

During the visit he said: “That’s why I’m here today, to get that message over that life is horrendous for the people in Ukraine and their reality is ongoing.

“And it’s always the way there’s a lot of tension at the start, and then it will drift a little.

“That’s just human nature. But it’s really important that we don’t let that happen, that we keep our focus on the people of Ukraine.”

The Mayor added that ‘the Greater Manchester way’ was ‘not to be fair weather friends, we’re in it for the long haul.’ Mr Burnham also revealed that he hopes to organise a larger demonstrat­ion in the city centre in the latter part of May as ‘a show of solidarity’ with Ukrainians -- and extended the invitation to an indie rock band.

He continued: “I think the feeling amongst us all today was that we are going to aim for a big Manchester show of solidarity, but also bring people together to kind of hopefully send the message of hope as long as we’re still here and it’s something that is noticed in Ukraine.

“I don’t know whether I can persuade The Wedding President to take the stage. They did have a Ukrainian album years ago and I remember buying that so some of the bands are still still playing so I’m hoping we can get them to come down.”

Mr Burnham has been shown around the centre by a committee of club members, one of whom was Gina Mandzij. She has been instrument­al in establishi­ng the refugee shop, and was previously involved in running the school upstairs.

Now, she’s the bench chair of the Associatio­n of Ukrainian Women in Great Britain. She explained her role in helping throughout the crisis: “With lots of things going on the first few weeks, everything was being packed and sent to Ukraine, the whole on the first floor on boxes up to the ceiling.

“By about week four, [people in Ukraine] said to us don’t send any more clothes, but they gave us a specific wishlist. We told people not

to bring us any more.

“Well, then we said, ‘if we can get to refugees who are actually coming here, they are going to have to carry it here. So we’ve decided that we will sort through all the things that we’ve got [and establish the shop].” The support for the Ukrainian community in Manchester does not end with clothes, prams, nappies, first aid, toiletries -- or even an old touring bus parked outside that will be driven to Ukraine to be repurposed as a hospital. The group hosts coffee mornings for new arrivals and existing members of the community.

School lessons keep the language alive, and the country’s heritage –something so precious in a country which went from being part of the USSR to invaded by Russia in less than 30 years – is kept alive by sisters Alexandra Mitchell and Larysa Bolton.

The pair, who grew up in Oldham, both are now archivists, and use their skills in the centre’s folk museum on the first floor. Alexandra explains why they give so much time up: “Our mum was a teacher here at the Saturday school for the nursery.

“So from the age of one, we were here every Saturday till we finally started to get involved – so it was really important for us.

“It’s part of carrying on like our heritage and our input to the communitie­s and keeping Ukrainian identity kind of going.”

And women in Ukrainian communitie­s have always been ‘central,’ Larysa added. She said: “[Our grandma] she was a teenager when she arrived [in the UK] – who is going to teach her how to be Ukrainian?

“Who is going to teach her how to embroider a blouse for kids? Or make an Easter Paska? It’s all of that and that’s what the Associatio­n of Ukrainian Women is all about.”

Life is horrendous for the people in Ukraine and the reality is ongoing Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham

 ?? ?? Larysa Bolton, left,and Alexandra Mitchell at the Folk Museum inside the Ukrainian Cultural Centre in Cheetham Hill
Larysa Bolton, left,and Alexandra Mitchell at the Folk Museum inside the Ukrainian Cultural Centre in Cheetham Hill
 ?? ?? Gina Mandzij from the Ukrainian Cultural Centre
Gina Mandzij from the Ukrainian Cultural Centre

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