Save the Children's Ukraine Crisis Regional Fund

by Save the Children Federation
Save the Children's Ukraine Crisis Regional Fund
Save the Children's Ukraine Crisis Regional Fund
Save the Children's Ukraine Crisis Regional Fund
Save the Children's Ukraine Crisis Regional Fund
Save the Children's Ukraine Crisis Regional Fund
Save the Children's Ukraine Crisis Regional Fund

Project Report | Aug 9, 2024
Ukraine: A Year In My Life

By Save the Children | Save the Children

Sofia
Sofia

Thank you for continuing to support Save the Children's Ukraine Crisis Regional Fund. Because of donors like you, Save the Children and local partners have supported more than 2.6 million people - so far! We know that this conflict is far from over and families will need assistance for years to come. That’s why we remain steadfast in our commitment to serving children and families caught in this conflict for as long as they need to recover and rebuild their lives.

We interviewed 16-year old Sofia*, who has been internally displaced by the war, about what her life has been like since the conflict in Ukraine began. Here is her story, in her own words

For our village in eastern Ukraine, the beginning was on February 17, 2022. I was having physics classes online when we first heard explosions ten kilometres away. They then began to land on nearby streets. Our teacher instructed us to rush to the shelter. When I got to the corridor, I heard a loud explosion. I only managed to sit next to the wall, close my ears, and open my mouth to avoid being shocked by the blast wave. We then dashed to the basement, closing the door only to have fragments fly across the basement, the roof, and the asphalt. I sobbed. It was a typical morning, and here we are.

The shelling continued in the days that followed. On February 21, I awoke to the most powerful explosion. Just a big bang. The birds flew, and then there was silence. It felt like the end of the world. We didn’t have time to go to the basement, so my grandmother and I hid behind two walls.

Later that day, we had a session with a psychologist at the village club when we heard a loud explosion. I realized it was somewhere around my house. I remember everything in bits and pieces: how I got to my yard, how there were no windows in the summer kitchen, how a window in the house completely fell out with all the panes, how I entered my room and saw a small shrapnel piece that had pierced the window and was hanging on curtains.

We then went to hide in the basement of an apartment building. Beds, a stove, and a table had been arranged there since 2014 when hostilities first started in our region. I was in the 2nd grade then. I remember how it was in our village, with tanks firing from our streets. I recall how happy we were as children sitting in the same basement when a lady brought us cooked corn. It was like a game where tanks appeared to be cool. We became accustomed to something flying over us. There was nothing we could do.

But this time I got stronger. I contacted volunteers, and we agreed that they would take me and eight other children out with the parents’ permission. On February 23, we walked around Kharkiv like the happiest children, and we even went to the zoo. However, we heard explosions late at night. “C’mon, it’s Kharkiv, there can’t be any explosions,” I reasoned at first. But then we realized there was shelling going on

From Kharkiv, we drove for nearly five days to western Ukraine to settle in a hostel. I thought I was leaving home for two weeks. I expected everything to be over in a month.

When we arrived here in March, I started to help at a humanitarian aid point by registering people. Shampoo, shower gel, and other necessities were requested. One woman in summer flip-flops was relieved to receive shoes. I realized that people had nothing. I realized I had left on time.

I begged my grandmother, who was staying at home, to leave because I was alone and worried that I wouldn’t be able to handle everything mentally. She has been my main caregiver since I was five. Grandma arrived to me in western Ukraine on April 4. In mid-May, we discovered that only two walls of our house remained. And by now, there is nothing but stones. I spent my entire 16-year life there, and it was all destroyed in a matter of months.

At the end of May, we were told that my father was gone. We didn’t sleep for two days because we were crying. Then, on June 2, my father called to tell that he was fine, although injured and getting treatment in the hospital.
 

The region where I live now is rather safe. I was able to spend the entire summer hanging out with my new friends. I moved with my grandmother from the hostel to a house in July where we now live for free. In the autumn, I began my senior year of high school and will be taking exams to study journalism at a university. I want to get a good education.

However, I am still affected by the war. I haven’t heard anything from my mom in eight months. It would be a huge relief to learn that she is alive and well.

There are also power outages, making communication difficult. One morning I saw some sad news reports from the city where my father now lives. I wanted to check on him, but there was no signal and no power. Situations like this make me sick.

There is also a sense of nostalgia. What if I didn’t sit here right now and instead went for a walk in the park back home? Or else I’d be sitting in my room? We completed its renovation just before the war.

Now I live by the rule “be yourself and do what you like.” If you enjoy drawing, do so. And it appears to me that it will be very useful even during this war. Children who enjoy drawing might become architects who will rebuild everything destroyed by the war.

*Names have been changed for privacy and protection.

Sofia in the room she shares with her grandmother
Sofia in the room she shares with her grandmother
Sofia smiling
Sofia smiling

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By Save the Children | Save the Children

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Save the Children Federation

Location: Fairfield, CT - USA
Website:
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Twitter: @savethechildren
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United States
$52,681 raised of $75,000 goal
 
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