A Kharkiv bomb shelter: the only home
baby Zhenia has known
Send a link to a friend
[October 14, 2022]
By Vitalii Hnidiy
KHARKIV, Ukraine (Reuters) - Wide-eyed and
gripping a stuffed blue rabbit, six-month-old Zhenia settles into his
pram before being walked along a Kharkiv factory forecourt - a treat to
be savoured for someone who has lived in a bomb shelter since he was
born.
Pushing the buggy is his mother, 39-year-old Olha Shevchenko. Seven
months pregnant when the war broke out on Feb 24, her house in the
Ukrainian village of Prudyanka was destroyed by shelling that same
morning.
"We were woken up at five in the morning by the sound of bombs. At 6
a.m. the suburban trains stopped running, so we could not leave," she
told Reuters.
Fearing that advancing Russian troops would soon reach her home, lying
north of Kharkiv some 20km (12 miles) from the border, she eventually
managed to escape in a neighbour's car with her two older sons, Nikolay,
17 and Andriy, 16.
When they reached Ukraine's second city she rejoined her husband Evgen
and, offered a refuge in the shelter underneath the factory where he
works, they moved in.
Nikolay and Andriy left for Poland last month, where friends helped
arrange accommodation and schooling for them. But the rest of the family
remains in the brick and concrete surroundings that, for Olha, have a
disconcerting familiarity.
"I knew this bomb shelter because when I was a little girl I saw it with
my grandpa. I asked him what it was for and he said 'For when the war
comes but hopefully you will never have to see it again'. Well, now I
have," she said, with a rueful smile.
[to top of second column]
|
Olha Shevchenko, 39, and her husband
Evgen look for their things in their house, damaged by the Russian
military strike, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues in Kharkiv
October 12, 2022. REUTERS/Vyacheslav Madiyevskyy
Zhenia was born in a nearby maternity hospital some two months after
they moved in.
"The following day in the afternoon we checked out of hospital to
come here," Olha added, cradling her baby as they sat on a bed
inside the bunker.
With renewed shelling of Kharkiv making it increasingly dangerous
for them to be outside, the family have worked hard to make the
shelter as liveable as possible.
It is linked to the power grid and equipped it with basic cooking
facilities, food, books, toys and even a TV - all part of
preparations for what they expect to be longer haul underground.
"We will surely spend winter here because we have nowhere else to
go," Olha said. "We are not going to go back home (to Prudyanka)
because first of all in order to rebuild it, clean it all, it is not
a job for one day."
(Reporting by Vitalii Hnidiy, Writing by John Stonestreet; editing
by Anna Dabrowska)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |