Six months into the war, Ukrainian refugee agonises about returning
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[August 23, 2022]
By Agnieszka Pikulicka-Wilczewska
POZNAN, Poland (Reuters) - Tatiana
Afansieva dreams of returning to Ukraine from her life of exile in
Poland, but even though her neighbours back home in Kryvyi Rih tell her
Russian shelling there has stopped, she is too afraid.
"People tell me that it looks normal, life goes on, people go to work,"
Afansieva, 34, told Reuters from her room in a flat she shares with a
Polish woman who wanted to help refugees in Poznan, western Poland.
"I can say that I accept it and I will return, but maybe my body will
not be able to cope with it."
A mother of two, Afansieva fled the central city of Kryvyi Rih in March,
shortly after Russia attacked Ukraine on Feb. 24, becoming one of
roughly 6.7 million of Ukrainians forced to leave by what Moscow calls
its "special military operation".
Like more than a million of the refugees, she has made a temporary home
in Poland, Ukraine's western neighbour, relying on the kindness of
strangers and government aid.
And just like many of them, six months into the war, she has no idea
when, or if, she will be able to return.
"I don't sleep in my bed. I don't wake up with my cat. I don't go to my
yard to drink coffee, water flowers in the morning," she said.
"It feels like the devil has come down to our earth, in a different way.
This is Armageddon."
After several rounds of western sanctions launched against the Kremlin
since the start of the war, diplomats acknowledge they are limited in
how they can significantly further pressure Russia and force it to back
down.
Meanwhile, after an initial outpouring of public support for refugees
across countries neighbouring Ukraine to the west, such as Poland,
resources are drying up and property agents in many places find it
increasingly difficult to find housing.
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Magdalena Pietrusik-Adamska, from the Poznan city hall, says many
refugees are worried that an economic slowdown spreading across
Europe may eventually turn their hosts against them.
"We need to make sure we prevent what our guests and residents are
afraid of, an escalation of tensions over employment ... a change in
social mood," she told Reuters.
'I DIDN'T WANT TO COME HERE'
When Kryvyi Rih first came under shelling, Afansieva barricaded her
bedroom and put a wardrobe against the window and blocked it with
books and a blanket.
"I thought shrapnel would hit these items first. But I understood
that if something fell on the roof, we would simply get buried right
there."
In early March, she took her two children and two backpacks and
along with a friend and thousands of other refugees, she got on a
train to Lviv, leaving her husband and her entire life behind. In
Poland, thanks to a Facebook group for refugees, she found a free
apartment in Poznan.
Her children started school soon after, but she has struggled to
find jobs, and nothing that compares with her well-paying position
at a pharmaceutical company in Ukraine.
She had interviewed for a promotion to a regional sales
representative just before Fed. 24 but didn't hear back before the
war started, and now makes a living as a cleaner in Poznan, earning
just over a 100 euros a month.
Most of the time, she is worried about her husband who stayed back.
"I want to go home … If only I was told that we can safely return, I
would leave on foot now," she said, her voice breaking. "I didn't
want to come here. I don't want to take anyone's place here. I have
my own place."
(Additional reporting by Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk, Editing by William
Maclean)
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