Home News Ukraine: Narrative of war’s atrocities is ‘forging a nation together’

Ukraine: Narrative of war’s atrocities is ‘forging a nation together’

0


Before the war, Oleh Azarov, a teacher in the Kyiv, Ukraine, suburb of Bucha, taught a civil defense course called Defending Ukraine. In addition to such pragmatic topics as first-aid techniques, the course had an ideological component mentioning national pride and dignity that at times made students’ eyes roll.

But that was before the war, which is now reframing and reinvigorating Ukraine’s national identity.

Why We Wrote This

Traumatic as they have been, Russia’s wartime atrocities have created a visceral shared experience for Ukraine. That is feeding a grand historical narrative, which some say had been missing.

When invading Russian forces approached Bucha, Mr. Azarov chose to remain. “They were very intense days and nights,” he says of the occupation of Bucha, from which gruesome images reverberated around the world after Russia’s retreat.

Mr. Azarov was not alone in witnessing the atrocities as they occurred: A handful of his students also stayed. Now he’s planning to harness those shared experiences in his classroom. It’s a challenge other Ukrainian educators are also facing: how to integrate this story into Ukraine’s historical narrative.

“I don’t know what I will be able to tell them, what I will be allowed to tell them, and what they can hear,” says Mr. Azarov. “I feel like some of my pupils saw even more than I saw.”

Bucha, Ukraine

The Ukrainian teacher appears haggard, exhausted, and overwhelmed by the trauma of witnessing Russia’s deadly military advance on his hometown of Bucha, the suburb northwest of Kyiv whose name has become synonymous with Russian cruelties in Ukraine.

As the Russian troops arrived, Oleh Azarov recalls, he helped wounded and retreating Ukrainian soldiers, even as he feared local infiltrators. Going outside was terrifying, he says, because “you never know how this will finish; people were being killed in the streets.”

“They were very intense days and nights. … I stayed to see it with my own eyes,” Mr. Azarov says of the occupation of Bucha. Later, the gruesome scenes of bodies left in the open by withdrawing Russian forces – often with hands tied behind their backs and shot execution-style – reverberated around the world.

Why We Wrote This

Traumatic as they have been, Russia’s wartime atrocities have created a visceral shared experience for Ukraine. That is feeding a grand historical narrative, which some say had been missing.

But Mr. Azarov was not alone in witnessing the atrocities as they occurred: A handful of his students also stayed in Bucha. Now, the teacher is planning how to harness those shared experiences in his classroom.

“I don’t know what I will be able to tell them, what I will be allowed to tell them, and what they can hear,” says Mr. Azarov. “I feel like some of my pupils saw even more than I saw.”

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here