Santa Fe New Mexican

Scarred by war, Ukraine’s children carry on

Hundreds of kids killed in conflict; for survivors, trauma certain to leave psychologi­cal marks

- By Hanna Arhirova

LVIV, Ukraine — The two children squinted to see through the thick smoke that hung in the air after a deafening blast shook their small home in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region.

The pair, ages 9 and 10, called out for their father. Only eerie silence followed.

Then Olha Hinkina and her brother, Andrii, rushed to the bomb shelter, as they had been taught. When the booms stopped and the smoke cleared, they found their father on the porch — motionless and covered in blood after being struck by a Russian projectile.

“Father was killed at seven in the morning,” said Andrii, who now lives in the safer western city of Lviv, near the border with Poland.

The two siblings join a generation of Ukrainian children whose lives have been upended by the war. Russia’s full-scale invasion has subjected them to constant bombardmen­t, uprooted millions from their homes and turned many into orphans.

Hundreds of kids have been killed. For the survivors, the wide-ranging trauma is certain to leave psychologi­cal scars that will follow them into adolescenc­e and adulthood.

“Even if children fled to a safer area, it doesn’t mean they forgot everything that happened to them,” said psychologi­st Oleksandra Volokhova, who works with children who escaped the violence.

At least 483 children have lost their lives and nearly 1,000 have been wounded, according to figures from Ukraine’s general prosecutor’s office.

Meanwhile, UNICEF says an estimated 1.5 million Ukrainian children are at risk of depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health issues, with potentiall­y lasting effects.

Nearly 1,500 Ukrainian children have been orphaned, the National Social Service of Ukraine said.

The largest number of child casualties comes from Donetsk, the epicenter of many battles, where 462 children have been killed or wounded, according to Ukrainian officials.

That figure does not include casualties from the Russian occupied city of Mariupol, which is also part of Donetsk province, where Ukrainian officials have found it difficult to track the dead and wounded.

Before the war tore them apart, the Hinkina family was like any other living in the village of Torske, which is 22 miles from the front.

With the death of their father in October, the children were orphaned. Their mother died years before the war.

Six months later, the siblings appear to be moving past the worst of their ordeal.

Police and volunteers evacuated them to a safer area in western Zakarpatti­a region, where they were cared for by government social services and a Ukrainian charity organizati­on called SOS Children’s Villages, which provided housing and counseling.

Their story became known in and around Torske after police released a widely seen video that showed their father’s body being removed from the family home.

“We knew the village. We knew where they lived. We knew these people,” said Nina Poliakova, 52, from the nearby town of Lyman.

Although she fled last year with her family to Lviv, Poliakova continued to follow news from her native area. Then tragedy struck her life as well when her 16-year-old foster son died suddenly from a heart condition.

She also has a 16-year-old foster daughter she took in with her husband in 2016 from the occupied town of Horlivka, where hostilitie­s with Russian-backed separatist­s began, years before the 2022 invasion.

Mired in grief, Poliakova received a call one day from a local center supporting children. The caller asked if she would be willing to meet the Hinkin siblings.

At their first meeting, they talked mostly about the Hinkin family home and the animals they had. One of Andrii’s favorite activities was to feed the pigs.

Poliakova decided to welcome the two children into her extended family.

“We had that tragedy in our family, and then fate just brought us together,” Poliakova said. “Now, many children have been left alone, without parents. Children need care, love. They seek to be embraced and comforted.”

Many foundation­s have emerged to help children overcome the trauma of war, including a group called Voices of Children, which has processed around 700 requests from parents looking for help with children suffering from chronic stress, panic attacks and symptoms of PTSD.

The pleas have changed as the war has progressed, according to a report issued by the charity. During this past winter, parents sought help after noticing behavioral changes in their children including apathy, aggression and anxiety, sensitivit­y to loud noises and anti-social habits.

“A child’s psyche remains more malleable than that of adults, and with timely and quality support, we understand that a child can more easily overcome any traumatic events,” said Olena Rozvadovsk­a, the head of Voices of Children.

 ?? HANNA ARHIROVA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Children dance at the recovery camp for children and their mothers affected by the war earlier this month near Lviv, Ukraine. A generation of Ukrainian children have seen their lives upended by Russia’s invasion of their country.
HANNA ARHIROVA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Children dance at the recovery camp for children and their mothers affected by the war earlier this month near Lviv, Ukraine. A generation of Ukrainian children have seen their lives upended by Russia’s invasion of their country.

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