One year on, the war in Ukraine continues to impact millions of lives worldwide. For many families inside the country, the war has ripped away the life they once knew. Family gatherings, school days with friends and lunches with work colleagues have been replaced with air raids, missile strikes and blackouts.

For the past year, the 探花精选 (探花精选) has worked with local partners in Ukraine, Poland, and Moldova to reach people with emergency support, including blankets, heaters and warm clothing, cash assistance, and safe spaces for women and children. Our response has reached over 2.7 million Ukrainian refugees worldwide  and 414,500 people in Ukraine with crucial on-the-ground support and online information services.

Well into 2023, the war has no end in sight.

Below, three stories from inside Ukraine illustrate how the war impacts ordinary people and their loved ones.

Irina & Safiya

Mother Iryna hugs her daughter Safiya

Irina, 44, and her eldest daughter Safiya, 9, are no strangers to conflict. In 2014, when Safiya wasn鈥檛 yet 2 years old, they fled their home in the Donbas region to escape ongoing violence. After a year and a half they were able to return home鈥攗ntil the conflict escalated into a war in 2022.

This time, Irina didn鈥檛 want to leave her hometown. She鈥檇 been working as an accountant in a grocery store and was on maternity leave with her third child. She was also looking after her 94-year-old mother after her father had died.

鈥淕unshots, explosions started in the city,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淥ne night, I took the baby into the corridor, put the chair on [the front door]...We slept in the corridor.鈥

The next night, the explosions were closer. Irina realized it was time to evacuate, so she and her husband packed their car and drove west, staying in shelters set up in church basements. They knew they had to find someplace more permanent for the children.

Vinnytsia, a small city in the center of the country, was known as a refuge where humanitarian aid and housing were available. Upon arriving, Irina felt at home among the old buildings and cobblestone streets.

鈥淥ur family registered for benefits,鈥 Irina says. 鈥淲e receive food packages. We live now thanks to the fact that humanitarian aid is given out in the city.鈥

For Safiya, however, war brought lasting trauma.

鈥淪he had fears all the time,鈥 Irina says. 鈥淎t home, before we left, there were always sounds of shooting in the background. She didn't want to sleep every night. It started a psychological problem.鈥

Safiya receives psychological support through the 探花精选鈥檚 Safe Healing and Learning Center, which reduces her anxiety and improves her well-being. She is developing social skills by making new friends and participating in classroom activities.

鈥淚 like these classes,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hese friends, they are so cool.鈥

Safiya holds up artwork to the camera, smiling.
Safiya shows off her artwork that she made at 探花精选鈥檚 Safe Healing Learning Space.
Photo: Joanna Nahorska for 探花精选

Irina doesn鈥檛 expect to return home soon. 鈥淭here is no gas, no water, no electricity there. No one knows when it will be fixed. Now, in winter, the plumbing freezes, and we'll have to redo all the houses.鈥

For now, Irina is determined to create a sense of normalcy for her family, and perhaps make Vinnytsia their new home.

鈥淚 want to buy a house in the long term,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y husband works and I will also be going back to work after maternity leave. I have worked as a salesperson and an accountant. I think I can find myself here.鈥

Olga 

Olga stands in front of her house, facing the camera

Before the war in Ukraine, Olga, 57, was always active. On weekdays, she worked as a blade modeler at a turbine factory in Mykolaiv. In her free time, she rehearsed and traveled to festivals with her Ukrainian folklore ensemble, Zoryanochka.

War upended Olga鈥檚 life. She lost her job, her folklore troupe dispersed and, worst of all, she became separated from her children, an experience too painful for her to speak about.

As their city came under heavy fire, Olga and her husband hid in their cellar along with their neighbors. They tried to evacuate to her sister鈥檚 home, but Olga became restless, so she returned home and focused on cookingand providing food for others in need.

鈥淚 can't sit at home,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 have to do something.鈥

Olga stands in the entrance to her cellar
Olga stands in the entrance of her pickle cellar, where she and her neighbors spent entire days and nights during air raids.
Photo: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi for the 探花精选

The war has taken a toll on Olga鈥檚 health, which had been compromised by cancer. 鈥淭he stress, the nerves, and the cold鈥 exacerbate her condition.

The 探花精选 is providing Olga with cash assistance, which she is using to buy medicine.

Still, trapped inside an ongoing war, her days are filled with fear and uncertainty.

鈥淵ou go to bed and you're afraid, you wake up and you pray,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou get up and you wait to see what happens next鈥擨 am waiting to see if it hits from above or not, and how it ends. I pray that our guys will all survive.鈥

When Olga reflects on her life before the war, it feels like a distant dream.

鈥淲e enjoyed our life. We smiled, we laughed鈥e sang, we danced鈥e lived like human beings.鈥

Despite everything, Olga continues to volunteer, distributing bread to people in her area. She hopes the energy she spends helping others will bring an end to the war sooner.

鈥淚 want to help those who are worse off, those on the front lines. I want to help the elderly, children, and the unemployed. I think the more we help each other, the faster it will be over.鈥

Maryna & Serhii 

Maryna, Serhii and their family stand in front of the rubble of their home.
Maryna dug her two children out from rubble after a missile struck their home in Ukraine.
Photo: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi for the 探花精选

Maryna, her 3-year-old son, Rostik, and her 11-year-old daughter, Kira, were home when a missile hit their house at 1:00 a.m. Earlier in the evening, Maryna鈥檚 husband, Serhii, had left on a business trip to Kyiv, and Maryna had an uneasy feeling that something might happen while he was away.

Maryna doesn鈥檛 remember hearing the actual explosion: she just felt the blast wave pass through her house and saw the lights flicker off. Then she heard Rostik crying, and she realized he was stuck under debris.

Plaster had fallen on his legs. 鈥淚 threw that clay to the side and took my son in my arms...I rushed out into the hall shouting, 鈥楰ira, Kira!鈥欌

Thankfully, Kira was unharmed. Their pets鈥攆our kittens and a guinea pig鈥攁lso survived.

鈥淜ira only realized that something had happened when she heard my hysterical scream,鈥 Maryna remembers. 鈥淭he sense of fear itself came, probably, two days later. Especially when it got dark, and the siren rang. She was just trembling.鈥

The family spent that night amid the wreckage, still terrified from what had happened. The next day, friends and volunteers brought food and hot tea, and procured a portable charger, materials to board up the areas blasted open and tents.

Maryna keeps positive by imagining her future, remodeled home. She wants a big kitchen, lilac wallpaper鈥 her daughter鈥檚 favorite color鈥攁nd a living room couch where overnight guests can sleep. The 探花精选 is helping Maryna register for financial compensation for damages.

Despite the challenges that lie ahead, Maryna feels hopeful about the future. Though much of her house has been destroyed, she has a clear vision of what it will look like once it鈥檚 complete again: 鈥淓verything will be beautiful,鈥 says Maryna, 鈥渋n a new way.鈥

Workers amongst the rubble of Maryna and Serhii's home.
Serhii and several helpers work to rebuild his and Maryna鈥檚 home that was destroyed in a missile strike.
Photo: Diana Zeyneb Alhindawi for the 探花精选

What is the 探花精选 doing to help?

The 探花精选 is scaling up its response efforts in Ukraine, Poland and Moldova to meet the evolving needs of displaced families by:

We are assisting Ukrainian refugees in Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, Czechiaand Bulgaria, as well as in Germany, Italy, Greece, the United States and the United Kingdom.

Learn more about the 探花精选's emergency response in Ukraine and Poland.