Christmas comes early and bittersweet for Eastern Europe's Ukrainian
refugees
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[December 20, 2022]
By Michael Kahn and Agnieszka Pikulicka-Wilczewska
PRAGUE/WARSAW (Reuters) - Many of the millions of Ukrainian refugees in
central and eastern Europe plan to mark Christmas early this year in
solidarity with their hosts, learning carols in new languages to
generate holiday cheer despite fears for relatives back home.
Ukrainians generally celebrate Christmas on January 7 in common with
Russians, but the country's Orthodox church has gradually shifted from
Moscow's orbit in recent years.
Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine this year, the church has said
congregations can now also celebrate on Dec. 25 -- something many
refugees said they would embrace.
Svetlana Safonova, 48, said when she fled Lviv in March she did not
imagine she would have to spend Christmas away from her husband and
adult daughter who serves in the Ukraine army.
"We would like to celebrate on December 25th to respect Bulgaria and
show one more time we are cutting off ties with Russia," said Safonova,
who plans to make traditional potato dumplings with her 9-year-old son
and her niece's family.
"We will go to an Orthodox church and pray for peace in Ukraine and for
the health of our soldiers and children."
Vasil, 45, and Marina, 36, Khymyshynets who fled their village near Kyiv
in March with their two children after a missile or artillery round
exploded near their house, now live in a two-room flat in Prague.
The family -- who could not afford a tree because they were saving to
send gifts to relatives in Ukraine -- baked Christmas cookies and taped
pine branches and Christmas lights on the wall while the children
practiced singing carols in Czech.
"We decided to just use some pine branches for the decoration so that it
looks good and makes the children happy," Khymyshynets, who was allowed
to leave Ukraine after the military rejected him due to poor eyesight,
said at the weekend.
Russia's attack on Ukraine, now in its tenth month, has killed tens of
thousands of people reduced cities to ruins and driven millions from
their homes, with 4.5 million registered across Europe, data from the
U.N. refugee agency UNHCR shows.
Many have been put up by states bordering Ukraine such as Romania,
Slovakia and Poland - which has hosted the most -- as well as nearby
countries like Bulgaria and the Czech Republic.
Attacks on Ukraine's power grid and heating plants mean few plan trips
home for the holidays.
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Members of the Ukrainian refugee family
Berezhko pose with members of Polish families Mioduszewski and
Koczek during a Christmas meal at a restaurant in Warsaw, Poland
December 18, 2022. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel
"We have not noticed many people going back for Christmas," said
Jakub Andrle, a migration program officer for Prague-based charity
People in Need, which works in and out of Ukraine. "The longer
people stay here the more difficult it is to go back."
'THANKS TO POLES'
Poland -- emerging Europe's largest country and which shares a
roughly 500-kiometre (310-mile) border with Ukraine -- has
registered more than 1.5 million refugees, the most of any European
Union nation, with millions more crossing its borders.
Serhiy Berezhko, a 64-year-old actor from Kyiv's Lesya Ukrainka
National Theatre arrived in Poland in March with his mother, wife
and two children, and said he would use Christmas as a time to thank
his Polish hosts.
"This holiday is a moment when people look into each other's eyes
and thank each other, hoping that things will get better in the
future," said Berezhko, whose family shared a holiday dinner with
the locals who helped them when they arrived. "Everything we have
now is thanks to Poles."
In Bulgaria, where nearly 50,000 refugees have registered for
temporary protection, refugees, backed by UNICEF, are offering
Ukrainian dishes and cookies and selling hand-made bags, decorations
and toys at a Christmas market in Sofia.
In Romania, refugees lined up to receive packages at their Bucharest
shelter where children decorated a Christmas tree.
Czechs who live near a Prague dormitory housing around 130 refugees,
organised a party with cookies festive music and donated gifts laid
out beneath a lighted Christmas tree.
"We are just trying to make it a little better for them," said Hana
Hillerova-Harper, who helped organise the event.
Children laughed as they played football in the snow and ran around
snatching cookies from the table as their mothers -- many holding
babies or pushing strollers -- chatted with each other.
Most of the children had only two things on their Christmas lists:
For the war to end and for their fathers to be safe.
"My biggest wish is that Ukraine wins," said eight-year old Kira
Bezrebra.
(Additional reporting by Tsvetelia Tsolova in Sofia and Luiza Ilie
in Bucharest, Writing by Michael Kahn, Editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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