Nowadays it’s hard to visit Ukraine because of the war, but everyone hopes that it will end and everything will change for the better side.
And if you are reading this article and know that the war is finished we are always happy to show what’s new here and have some adventures and emotions. Anyways, our door is always open for everybody at any time.
Posts published in “World”
Stories with a focus on geopolitics, writing about issues that face the world as a whole like climate breakdown and coronavirus.
I am proudly Jewish. Most of my classmates are aware of my heritage. While I’m not the most religiously devout Jew, I go to the synagogue for Rosh Hashanah and…
In the school basement with wet books, in outerwear, often without electricity, and under the sounds of air raid alerts, the students of my school are studying this year. Here in Ukraine, the war has completely changed the price of such basic and customary things for children around the world such as attending school, listening to teachers in the classroom, and following normal routines.
“When my colleagues found out that I’m only sixteen, they laughed [being unable to believe],” Tiknonov said. “In response, I showed them my passport, but sometimes even that was useless to convince them.”
So, eventually, we moved. Like many other Ukrainians, my husband and I were thrown away from our homes. And the railway stations were unimaginably horrific. It seemed to me that I was in Hell. There were screams, cries, and so much depression.