Home News Ukraine war divides families and exiles children. Why some stay.

Ukraine war divides families and exiles children. Why some stay.

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In three weeks of war, the United Nations estimates that 3 million Ukrainians have left their country – half of them children. But many more remain, a result of choices by their parents, or caught by circumstances beyond their control.

Across Ukraine, the war has forced families to make often excruciating decisions about whether to stay or to leave. Their calculations take into consideration several factors, from love of country to devotion to family.

Why We Wrote This

Protecting home. Protecting family. Keeping families together. The war is forcing many Ukrainians to choose among those principles. Our reporter spoke to families in Odessa who decided to stay.

Tetiana Gavryliuk, a doctor in an Odessa maternity ward, feels obligated to remain, but knows how tough the choice can be. She and her 12-year-old son chose to stay. She cites “our homeland” and “the city that I love,” as well as the presence of her parents, who won’t go.

“I am optimistic in my life, but this is complicated,” Dr. Gavryliuk says of her fluctuating emotions. A hopeful high point has been the defiant defense of the city of Mykolaiv, 80 miles east of Odessa. But low points include frequent scenes of Russian bombing of civilians, especially the large maternity hospital in Mariupol.

“I feel powerless when this happens. I feel we should not have mercy for them,” the doctor says of the Russian military. “I have no words for this.”

ODESSA, Ukraine

For decades, the aging military hardware on display at a sprawling Soviet-era park has created a favorite playground for children, who can’t help climbing on the rows of World War II artillery pieces, or marveling at the rockets and submarine.

Officially called the Memorial of the Heroic Defense of Odessa, it was created both to teach about the horrors of war – with the aim of avoiding such violence in the future – and to celebrate Odessans’ determination to defend their city.

For the families who today have chosen to stay with their children in Ukraine, despite the uncertain furies of the Russian advance, those messages are especially poignant.

Why We Wrote This

Protecting home. Protecting family. Keeping families together. The war is forcing many Ukrainians to choose among those principles. Our reporter spoke to families in Odessa who decided to stay.

On Wednesday, a Russian flotilla with amphibious landing capabilities was reported to be heading toward this strategic Black Sea port, widely seen as the final target of the Russian southern advance.

“It’s a hard decision; you have to be Ukrainian to feel this,” says Ivan, a father who gave only his first name, as his two daughters, ages 3 and 4, play on an 85 mm gun forged in 1939.

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