Daily Press

Putin made Ukraine a nation of refugees

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial board member for the The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Email her at trubin@phillynews.com.

KYIV, Ukraine — Driving around the heart of the Ukrainian capital one might almost think things had returned to normal.

More than three months after

Russia retreated from Kyiv, shops and restaurant­s in the center of the city are open and buildings are unscarred. Meanwhile, burned-out Russian tanks and mobile artillery are now on display in the plaza fronting the famous St. Michael’s Golden-Domed Monastery.

But it is the journey from Krakow, Poland, to Kyiv that gave me the most insight into how much has changed in Ukraine since I last visited in February, just before the Russian invasion began.

Vladimir Putin’s aggression has turned Ukraine into a country in motion.

The figures are staggering. There are an estimated 5 million Ukrainians who have fled their country. According to the United Nations refugee agency, as of June, at least 7 million Ukrainians had become internal refugees, with the number soaring as Russia destroys more cities, towns and villages in eastern Ukraine. Putin’s war crimes have driven as many as one-third of Ukrainians from their homes, according to the U.N. agency.

Poland is now home to an estimated 3 million Ukrainian refugees. Krakow, a spectacula­rly beautiful city with a medieval core and a castle that housed Polish kings, is host to at least 200,000 Ukrainians, most of them women and children. I met several, and heard their appreciati­on for the generosity of Polish volunteers who have helped them settle, and find housing and jobs.

The resilience of the Ukrainians and the openness of the Poles have both been stunning. But what I was told over and over by Polish volunteers I met — a lesson that should be taken to heart by Americans — was this: “We are helping them not only because they are brave, but because, if they were not fighting the Russians in Ukraine, we would be fighting them here.”

In Krakow, I met Viktoriia Mudritska, who was a director at the historical museum in Chernihiv, a midsize city located less than 40 miles from the Russian border, which was attacked on the first day of the war.

She told me how she hid during the bombardmen­t with three friends and four dogs in a friend’s small basement for 10 days until Ukrainian soldiers told them they had to leave. The house was destroyed the day after they left. “We didn’t believe this could happen,” she recalls. “Then you have to accept it.”

A practicing Buddhist, she stayed for a while in a Buddhist Center near the Polish border that was sheltering 100 refugees (she recovered there from a case of COVID-19). Then she went to stay with friends in Poland and “began to send CVs everywhere.” She had worked at the Chernihiv museum on a history of Jews in that city; her CV caught the eye of the head of the Galicia Jewish Museum in Krakow, and she was hired to work on educationa­l programs.

The museum and its director, Jakub Nowakowski, have made special efforts to help Ukrainians of all religions. Another refugee, Tetiana Veroniuk, who was a dancer and actress in Kyiv, went on Facebook looking for work. “Kuba” — Nowakowski — “found me and helped,” she told me.

But both Viktoriia and Tetiana speak of the special challenge that faces displaced Ukrainians abroad and at home. “I can only plan for a few days,” Viktoriia said. “Who knows what will be in our future?”

Tetiana echoed this uncertaint­y: “I had so many plans, my group traveled and performed abroad, but now ... I don’t know what comes next.”

It is this terrible uncertaint­y, as the war drags on, that haunts Ukrainians, and indeed the whole of Europe. How will things end? Will they end? Will the United States and Western Europe finally send Ukraine the long-range rocket launchers, artillery, and antimissil­e systems they need to drive the invaders back to their own soil?

This Ukrainian limbo cannot last forever. Either we and the Europeans give Ukraine the weapons to end it, or we will be drawn into Putin’s madness along with Ukraine.

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