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Ukraine photo story: How mobile support centres are helping communities overcome the psychological trauma of war

Ukraine photo story: How mobile support centres are helping communities overcome the psychological trauma of war

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Ukraine photo story: How mobile support centres are helping communities overcome the psychological trauma of war

calendar_today 09 September 2024

Two adults supervise a group of children playing at a table set up outside on the grass in front of a mobile support centre truck
UNFPA mobile support centres provide mental health and psychosocial support to communities, including young children, coping with the trauma of occupation. © UNFPA Ukraine.

YAHIDNE, CHERNIHIV REGION, Ukraine – This collection of photos highlights the struggles of one Ukrainian community living with the psychological trauma of occupation – and how UNFPA is helping to heal these invisible scars. 

When Russian soldiers entered the village of Yahidne, in northern Ukraine’s Chernihiv region, Halyna* (name changed for safety), 59, and her husband were in their home. The soldiers ordered them to undress and surrender their phones. Then as the soldiers took over their house, the couple was forced into the basement of a nearby school, carrying almost nothing with them. 

It was March 2022. Russia’s full-scale invasion was just beginning and the extent of it was still unclear. “I thought that they were just going to play with us for a day, no more. And then they would let us go home,” said Halyna. “But when we came to the basement, I saw that no, that is it, we are not here for one day.” 

Older man wearing a red cap and a young woman with dark hair in a ponytail stand in front of green wooden door with red graffiti showing entrance to school basement

More than 300 residents of the village were forced to stay in the school basement without adequate food, medicine or basic amenities. The space measured only around 190 square metres, so there was not enough room for everyone to sit, let alone lie down. While there, the residents had no communication, light or heat, and their clothes remained constantly damp due to condensation and poor ventilation. 

Two images side by side: On the right, a children's play areas in the basement, with a teddy bear and various small toys strewn on top of a small purple table. On the left, a narrow, poorly lit basement hallway. Walls are faded white, old school equipment like chairs and stools line the sides

The school janitor, Ivan, said the most challenging part was explaining the situation to the children: “The older kids understood everything on their own. But the youngest, just one and a half months old, cried constantly. Her mother did not have milk. We could not always boil water to feed the baby. We were fortunate if we could even get water from the well. There were times when we had to collect rainwater.”

More than 50 children were among those forcibly held in the basement. In order to distract them from the terrible conditions, makeshift play areas were set up and the walls were turned into canvases for drawing. 

Colourful children's drawings on a white wall surrounding a wooden mint-coloured door

 

The residents also used the walls to record their time underground. When the Ukrainian Government finally regained control over the village and released them from the basement, the wall showed that 27 days had passed and 10 people had died. 

Close-up shot of words handwritten in black on a white wall with a calendar marking the days spend in the basement sketched on a wooden mint-coloured door

Now, two years later, the consequences of the war and occupation in Yahidne continue to be felt. Not only have homes and streets been destroyed, but the residents who were detained are still scarred by the memories of what they endured. “I cry all the time,” said Halyna, recalling how the Russian soldiers repeatedly threatened her with violence and physically assaulted her husband.

“The wound has not healed yet. Even when I go to the garden, I am afraid. I dig in the beds and then look up to see if Russian soldiers are coming out of the forest. I cannot forget their faces.” 

To help respond to this psychological trauma, UNFPA-supported Mobile Survivor Relief Centres have been sent to Yahidne and other formerly occupied Ukrainian villages that experienced human rights violations like forced detentions and conflict-related sexual violence.

 

Four UNFPA volunteers in blue shirts prepare black backpacks outside their white mobile support centre truck

Olha Boyko, a psychologist with the Survivor Relief Centre, said the ongoing mental strain of war makes recovery even more challenging. Many survivors like Halyna continue to live in the places where the trauma occurred and are constantly confronted by reminders of their pain. “Many do not understand why this happened to them. Almost everyone has physiological symptoms resulting from the trauma they endured. There is also the fear that it could all happen again,” said Ms. Boyko. “That is why it is important to visit these communities, talk to the people, create an atmosphere of trust, and convey that they are not alone, that support is close.” 

Close-up shot of two women sitting next to each other, faces not visible, one in a blue UNFPA shirt and yellow lanyard taking notes, while the other holds a paper cup with her brown purse in her lap

Meanwhile, everything in the school basement remains as it was two years ago, though no classes have been held in the building since.

Many of the children who were forcibly confined there still live in Yahidne and play on the ruined school grounds, where empty boxes of Russian ammunition can sometimes be found. 

A group of children play around a table outdoors while a leftover box of Russian munitions lays next to them

During a visit to Yahidne, Liudmyla Burseva, a child psychologist from the UNFPA-supported Survivor Relief Centre, conducted a therapy session with local children. She said they were the most challenging group she had ever worked with: “They do not have experience trusting adults. They have not had positive experiences of believing in themselves and their abilities.

But the most important thing is that after our session, the children left with positive emotions and a sense of achievement. It is crucial that such activities are held regularly for these children.”

Two photos side by side: On the right, a young girl and boy draw on a white board. On the left, a woman in a bright magenta shirt helps a young girl decorate a piece of paper with colourful pompoms and glittery heart stickers.

UNFPA is committed to continuing to work together with the Government of Ukraine and partners to support people in small communities, particularly through the work of the Survivor Relief Centres, where Ukrainians affected by war, including survivors of conflict-related sexual violence, can receive psychosocial, legal and humanitarian assistance. The network of Survivor Relief Centres operates with support from Austria, Belgium, Spain and Sweden. 

Close-up shot of a woman, face not visible, handing another person a black UNFPA dignity kit backpack