God, what have they done to my homeland? Why did you let this happen? I no longer have a house. They’re ruining the fertile soil. They flooded my home. The water is thick with mud, the wreckage of our once prosperous lives and the tears for our drowned mothers, fathers and children…
WINTER
Give me the strength not to scream
A year ago, a friend sent me a message. “If you’re still in Kherson, get out as quickly as you can. I heard from a friend in the military in Moscow that after the retreat, they have decided to ‘flatten’ Kherson and won’t leave a building standing.” Ever since, my sunny southern city has lost a little more every day: building by building, person by person. Thirteen months of pain and loss.
Lydya, a pensioner, has been sitting in her apartment in the Korabel district of Kherson for six months. She can’t go out due to the effects of a stroke, and only saw the liberation of Kherson through her window. She spends all her free time — she now has a lot — praying: for her beloved city, for Ukrainian soldiers, for her children and for her fellow townspeople. She screams involuntarily whenever there is an explosion close by.
The war has come to the nearby town of Hola Prystan too. “Russian soldiers get drunk and drive around the city in tanks,” says Natasha, a childhood friend. “They shoot at our houses, have what fun they can.”