Miami Herald (Sunday)

Priceless paper: Refugees get IDs for new lives in Poland

- BY MONIKA SCISLOWSKA Associated Press

WARSAW, POLAND

Hoping to restore some normalcy after fleeing the war in Ukraine, thousands of refugees waited in long lines Saturday in the Polish capital of Warsaw to get identifica­tion cards that will allow them to get on with their lives — at least for now.

Refugees started queuing by Warsaw’s National Stadium overnight to get the coveted PESEL identity cards that will allow them to work, live, go to school and get medical care or social benefits for the next 18 months. Still, by mid-morning, many were told to come back another day, the demand was too high even though Polish authoritie­s had simplified the process.

“We are looking for a job now,” said 30-year-old Kateryna Lohvyn, who was standing in the line with her mother, adding it took a bit of time to recover from the shock of the Russian invasion.

“We don’t yet know [what to do],” she added. “But we are thankful to the Poles. They fantastica­lly welcome us.”

Maryna Liashuk said the warm welcome from Poland has made her feel at home already. If the situation worsens, Liashuk said she would like to stay permanentl­y in Poland with her family.

“If the war ends and if there is someplace to return to, we will do that. And if not, then we simply will remain here,” said Liashuk.

Poland has so far taken in more than 2 million refugees from Ukraine — the bulk of more than 3.3 million people that the U.N. says have fled since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24. Hundreds of thousands more have also streamed into Hungary, Slovakia, Moldova and Romania.

Most of the refugees fleeing Ukraine have been women and children, because men aged 18 to 60 are forbidden from leaving the country and have stayed to fight.

Polish authoritie­s said more than 123,000 refugees have been given the ID numbers — including more than 1,000 each day in Warsaw — since the program was launched Wednesday.

Svetlana, a Ukrainian woman from Ivano-Frankivsk who has lived and worked in Poland for over 10 years, has had relatives come now to Poland. She said receiving the Polish ID numbers will make a huge difference for everyone from Ukraine.

“This is really so important to us that we can officially look for work, send children to school and be active here,” Svetlana

said. “It really changes the way we feel here.”

Refugees can receive one-time benefit of $70 per person and a monthly benefit for each child under 18 of $117. Those who find jobs will have to pay taxes just like Polish workers.

Pavlo Masechko, a 17year-old from Novovolyns­k in the Volyn region of western Ukraine, has been trying to rebuild his life in the southeaste­rn Polish city of Rzeszow. Before the war, Masechko had plans to come to Poland to study when he finished high school, but he says being forced out of his country by war is something completely different.

“This is so stressful to leave your country in this moment like this,” said Masechko, who has joined a local school in Poland since arriving. Now, Masechko’s Ukrainian teacher is seeking to organize classes online that were suspended when Russia attacked.

“When the situation started, it was very difficult for me to focus on other things. But time passed and now the situation is more stable and stable in my head also,” he said. “I have started to focus again on other things in my life.”

 ?? ?? Ukrainian refugees wait at Warsaw’s National Stadium, but the applicatio­n points are not able to handle everyone.
Ukrainian refugees wait at Warsaw’s National Stadium, but the applicatio­n points are not able to handle everyone.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States