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				The couple live in a simple house in the village of Pereizne in 
				the Donetsk region, with their four children, aged between four 
				and 10, and three grandparents. 
				 
				The village, which had a population of 500 before Russia invaded 
				Ukraine in late February, bears the scars of war and occasional 
				shellfire can be heard and seen landing in the fields nearby. 
				 
				"They shell us constantly, there is no help, no water, no food," 
				said Bogdan, 31. "For literally a month, they don't bring 
				anything, not even bread. We live from whatever we've got here." 
				 
				The family survive on the food they have grown, baking bread in 
				an oven in the garden and drawing water from a well. 
				 
				When there is shelling they take shelter in a cellar where they 
				have stockpiled some provisions. 
				 
				"More or less, we've got everything here in the cellar," said 
				Bogdan. "When they shell us, we eat here." 
				 
				Olga, 27, is expecting the couple's fifth child. She worries 
				about the effect the conflict is having on the children. 
				 
				"We, as adults, at least know what to do," she said, gesturing 
				to their young son, Gleb. "What will he do, for example? He is 
				four years old and does not understand yet, thank God, that this 
				is war." 
				 
				Still, she says the family are determined to hold on to the home 
				they have worked hard for. 
				 
				"Our property is not fancy," she said. "But it is ours." 
				 
				(Reporting by Hamuda Hassan and Felix Hoske; Writing by Alex 
				Richardson; Editing by Ros Russell) 
				 
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