SHARE
COPY LINK

UKRAINE

Kharkiv children fleeing bombs find refuge in Italy

An Italian aid programme had for years provided Viktoria Shakshyna with a respite from the children's home where she lived in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine. When the bombs began falling, it became her lifeline.

Kharkiv children fleeing bombs find refuge in Italy
16-years-old Ukrainian refugee Viktoria (Vika) Shakshyna (C) is pictured in Cusago, a Milan suburb, on April 14, 2022 with her adoptive family, mother Michela Slomp (top), Anita (L) and Martina (R) at the family house which hosts her. (Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP)

“You could hear the shots and the sounds of missiles… many buildings in the city centre were destroyed, like our cinema,” the 16-year-old told AFP, recalling the torment in her city after Russia’s invasion.

But unlike so many others still trapped in Kharkiv, her nightmare ended on March 7 when, after a long journey by train and bus, she arrived in Cusago, near Milan, into the care of the family she has stayed with twice a year since she was nine.

Here, her room is filled with cuddly toys and happy memories of Italy that helped sustain her during the worst days.

READ ALSO: How can people in Italy offer Ukraine refugees a place to stay?

“If I have to die, I die. But I will have had a happy life, I was lucky, I managed to visit Disneyland in Paris, Berlin and Sicily,” she had told her
foster parents while in Kharkiv.

The Italian association “The Children of the East” (I bambini dell’ Est) grew out of European-wide efforts to give children from Ukraine fresh air and new possibilities after the 1986 nuclear disaster at Chernobyl. So far, the association has brought 280 refugees to Italy. (Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP)

Chernobyl disaster

Viktoria came to Italy with the help of “The Children of the East”, an Italian association which grew out of Europe-wide efforts to give children from Ukraine fresh air and new possibilities after the 1986 nuclear disaster at Chernobyl.

She regularly spent three months in the summer and one month in the winter in the quiet, green surroundings of Cusago.

READ ALSO: Italy offers one-year residence permit to Ukraine refugees

It was a welcome break from Kharkiv, where she lived in one of Ukraine’s notorious children’s homes, which host orphans but also those separated from parents deemed unfit for various reasons, from criminality to alcoholism.

Since Russia invaded its neighbour on February 24, Ukraine’s second-largest city has faced a daily barrage of Russian rocket attacks, day and night.

When the air raid sirens went off, Viktoria — known as Vika — took refuge in a school basement. Wrapped in a sleeping bag, she passed the time by playing Burraco, an Italian card game.

The Italian aid programme had for years provided Viktoria Shakshyna with a respite from the children’s home where she lived in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine. When the bombs began falling, it became her lifeline. (Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP)

With her host mother, 47-year-old graphic designer Michela Slomp, nearby she says her future is Italy.

“My house is here, I want to finish school and go to university,” she said in almost perfect Italian, her face lit up with a large smile.

READ ALSO: Can Ukrainian refugees save Italy’s ‘dying’ hill towns from extinction?

Vika was not even born when Chernobyl’s number four reactor exploded on April 26, 1986, causing the world’s worst nuclear accident, killing hundreds and spreading radioactive contamination west across Europe.

But the desire to help the children of Ukraine lives on through the “Children of the East” association, run by Federica Bezziccheri.

Since the war began, her telephone has rung day and night with Italian families searching desperately for their foster children — and young
Ukrainians trying to get out.

“We are experiencing the war live. When we call the children via videolink, we can hear the bombing,” Bezziccheri said.

‘Die like rats’

“The girls tell us how they only had to walk a hundred metres to see the dead. The boys signed up as volunteers, filling sandbags or digging trenches,” she told AFP at her apartment in Milan.

“Some young people say it is better to risk being injured or killed helping their country, than to die like rats in a cage under a building.”

READ ALSO: More than 500 Italian medics sign up to provide aid on Ukraine front line

So far, the association has brought 280 refugees to Italy, out of more than 100,000 Ukrainians who have sought refuge in the Mediterranean country.

The Italian foster family of Yana Alieva, 20, got her out of Kharkiv in January, anticipating Russia’s invasion.

20-years-old Ukrainian refugee Yana Alieva (L), from Kharkiv, is pictured in Milan on April 26, 2022 drinks tea with her Italian adoptive mother Carla Marini in the home of the family which hosts her. (Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP)

She too was brought up in a children’s home but is now safe in a Milan apartment, a blue and yellow Ukrainian flag draped from the balcony.

READ ALSO: Solidarity demos across Europe demand end to Ukraine war

“I am heartbroken. In a few days my world has disappeared. My boyfriend and my friends survived the bombs in the cellars before moving to safer areas, I fear for those who stayed,” she said.

She is also angry. Before the war, “we were all united, Russians and Ukrainians, as one people”, but now “we see who they really are”.

20-years-old Ukrainian refugee Yana Alieva, from Kharkiv, looks at pictures of her city in Milan on April 26, 2022 in the home of the family which hosts her. (Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP)

She has enrolled in the Catholic university in Milan, but hopes to return to Ukraine after the war.

“My home is there,” she said, adding she hoped “to participate in the reconstruction of my city and make it even more beautiful”.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

POLITICS

Italy PM states ‘determined’ support as Zelensky presses allies

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni reaffirmed her strong support for Ukraine Saturday after talks with President Volodymyr Zelensky, as he visited allies to press for more weapons to fight Russia.

Italy PM states 'determined' support as Zelensky presses allies

“We must not give up on Ukraine,” Meloni said after the meeting on the sidelines of an economic forum in Cernobbio, northern Italy, which focused on reconstruction and efforts to end the war with Russia.

Zelensky had on Friday addressed the European House-Ambrosetti forum, hours after pressing for more weapons at a meeting of allies at Ramstein Air Base in Germany, where Washington unveiled $250 million in new military aid.

Meloni’s government — which this year holds the rotating G7 presidency — has been among the strongest supporters of Ukraine since Russian forces invaded in February 2022.

READ ALSO: Zelensky meets Meloni in Italy, presses for more arms

But some members of her coalition government — notably League leader Matteo Salvini, who has a history of warm ties with Moscow — are less enthusiastic.

Rome has sent weapons to Kyiv, but has said these should be used only on Ukrainian territory, not to attack Russia itself.

In her address to the forum on Saturday, Meloni said the position of EU and NATO member Italy on Ukraine was “extremely serious, determined and clear”.

She addressed members of the Italian public who are “scared, legitimately worried about the war”, but urged them not to “fall into the trap of Russian propaganda” in believing Ukraine’s fate was sealed.

Helping Ukraine fight back against its vastly more powerful neighbour had created the “stalemate” conditions in which peace could be discussed, she said.

And she warned that allowing Ukraine to fall to Russian aggression “will not bring peace, it will bring chaos” and economic consequences “more serious that what it costs today to support Ukraine”.

More weapons

In Germany on Friday, where he also met Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Zelensky urged Kyiv’s supporters to provide more weapons and follow through on previous commitments, saying: “The number of air-defence systems that have not been delivered is significant.”

And after Ukraine’s surprise push into Russia’s Kursk region last month, he again called for restrictions to be lifted on the use of long-range Western weapons.

At Cernobbio, he assured Italy that the weapons would only be used to hit military targets.

In their talks Saturday, Meloni said she had also discussed with Zelensky a planned meeting in Italy next year on reconstructing Ukraine.

And she “reiterated the centrality of support for Ukraine in the agenda of the Italian G7 presidency”, according to her office.

“I thank Giorgia and the Italian people for their support and joint efforts in restoring a just peace,” the Ukrainian leader wrote on X after the talks, posting a video of the pair hugging.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban — who upset his EU counterparts and Zelensky by meeting Putin in Moscow in July — also addressed the Cernobbio forum on Friday.

The Ukrainian president rejected Orban’s calls for a ceasefire, saying that Putin had never respected earlier accords.

Zelensky’s visits to Italy and Germany came just days after one of the deadliest strikes of the war and as Russian forces make battlefield gains.

Some 55 people were killed and 300 wounded in a Russian missile strike on Tuesday on the city of Poltava.

Meanwhile Moscow’s forces advance in the Donbas, with Putin on Thursday declaring that capturing the eastern area was his “primary objective” in the conflict.

SHOW COMMENTS