Russia

One month ago, Anastasiia Zamula didn’t know a thing about bulletproof vests or night vision goggles. “Three days before the war, I was working on a shoot for Vogue,” the 23-year-old, Kyiv-based stylist says of the time before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“I didn’t know vests came in different categories, or levels.

Now I know: level three protects against lighter small arms and shrapnel, but you need level four to stop higher-caliber rifles.”The arrival of war to Kyiv has brought swift career changes to nearly all of its residents. In a city well-known for a hip, vibrant creative scene, a generation of young people have dedicated themselves to the war effort behind the frontlines. The “Guardian Angels,” a collective of friends and fellow creatives from the Ukrainian capital, are among those delivering food and medicine to citizens who have remained in Kyiv, as well as key equipment to the armed forces and territorial defense units. Made up of more than 50 volunteers, the group was founded by DJ and director Markiian Matsiiovskyi, who recently appeared in New York Magazine’sfeature on the war stories of 30 young Ukrainians. Like most of the capital’s residents, 30-year-old hairdresser Reshat Isliamov did not believe a full-scale war could happen. “The first few days, I just sat home and read the news all day,” said Ismailov, a native Crimean Tatar who moved to Kyiv after Russia annexed the peninsula in 2014.

“There were thoughts of leaving, but we soon understood that we wouldn’t go anywhere.

By the third day, we began to connect with like-minded friends and got to work.”Model and houseplant dealer Yeva Podurian left Kyiv in the first week of the war, evacuating with her mother to Ivano-Frankivsk in the country’s west, from where she offered her assistance to the group. “At first, there was a feeling of apathy, weakness, almost hypnosis — it was incredibly difficult,” Podurian, 21, said of the initial emotional response to the invasion.

“Then, this incredible inner awakening… my energy returned and it became much easier to handle what was going on.” At first the volunteers’ work was chaotic, as social media was inundated with screenshots of requests for help from all over Kyiv.“Markiian was the first one to start coordinating among our group of friends.

He would just send out demands from all over the place; a grandmother here would need medicine or a cat over there would need to be fed,” said Isliamov.

“When we first joined, everyone was working on their own initiative and their own dime.”It didn’t take long for a more organized system to take shape. “I saw that Reshat had made this chat for Kyiv, and I saw that it was flooded with screenshots of people requesting help — it was all very disorganized,” said Podurian.

“I offered to help transfer these screenshots into texts and organized them.” Now, all requests and deliveries are tracked in color-coded spreadsheets for each neighborhood of Kyiv, with full financial transparency.Zamula has now chosen to set up her own team in Lviv, complementing the work of the Guardian Angels.

Described as a “girls’ collective,” Tsvit (or “flower” in Ukrainian), supplies Ukraine’s army and territorial defense militia with essential frontline items. “Markiiyan sent me a list of things needed for soldiers in Bucha: vests, helmets, torches, thermal underwear, boots etc.,” Zamula said.

“I opened this huge list, and the first item was ‘Winter military sleeping bags, 300 pcs.’ I knew I couldn’t manage on my own, so I called some of my girlfriends who were spread out all over Ukraine, and we quickly made a plan to organize some kind of crowdfunding.” Within the first weeks of the war, as Europe’s military stores were emptied of their commercially available stock of bulletproof vests, Zamula and her friends had to get creative.

Here, the diverse skill set and networks of Kyiv’s creative crowd came to the fore.“I wrote to my friend, a designer in Kyiv with her own brand.

She told me that she had a workshop and employees, and that they wanted to make bulletproof vests,” Zamula said.

“I got her in touch with some blacksmith guys making the plates in another city, and now they are working together to make the vests.”  Zamula credits the group's energy and organization to the tight-knit bonds many members had already forged in peacetime.

“The fact that we all knew each other, that we went to each other’s birthdays and parties, had a huge effect on what we were doing,” she said.“Before this all started, we already had such a strong common ideology… We are all so different but have so much in common which just makes it so easy.

We are always coming up with things together, always running into each other and collaborating.

I guess this is just a continuation of that tradition.” But volunteers on the ground in Kyiv now see war as the new normal.

While the capital hasn’t seen the same level of destruction as other Ukrainian cities such as Kharkiv, artillery fire can be regularly heard on the outskirts, ans residential areas are still hit on a daily basis.“We luckily haven’t had any close shaves, but the danger resides in your thoughts,” said Isliamov.

“You might be walking down the street when you read the news, then you hear sirens, then explosions, then your windows shake — it certainly has an effect.

These thoughts exist in your head, but we try not to hold them there too much.”Otherwise, the humanitarian situation in Kyiv has mostly stabilized.

Food is readily available in supermarkets, though there are still shortages of some medicines.

Russia’s advance into the outer suburbs has stalled, and troops are not yet close to encircling the city. “[Kyiv] is like a clenched fist,” said Isliamov.

“There are checkpoints everywhere in the city, there are soldiers and Territorial Defense on the streets, and you just understand that by now everyone is mentally prepared to defend their homes.”It still remains to be seen how much more destruction Kyiv will suffer before the war is over.

Recent weeks have mostly seemed to be quieter compared to earlier on in the invasion, though multiple missile strikes on the evening of March 20 were a grim reminder that the bombardment of the city can intensify at any moment’s notice.Whatever the outcome, Kyiv’s Guardian Angels are bullish about the future. “We are living in such a unique moment — the war, the destruction, all the horrors that have befallen us have also coincided with the rise of our incredibly active generation,” Zamula said.

“I think after this war is over, young Ukrainians will rebuild Ukraine better than it’s ever been before.”





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues-Publication from Jan 2021


Buy Our Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting



It's Voluntary! Take care of your Family, Friends and People around You First and later think about us. Its Fine if you dont wish to contribute and if you wish to contribute then think about the Homeless first and Feed them. We can survive with your wishes too :-). You can Buy our Merchandise too which are of the finest quality.


STRIPE


In Russia, International Safe Abortion Day Is a Reminder of Reproductive Rights Backsliding


Russian Hospital Strikes Kill 7, Ukraine Says


How Close is Russia to Capturing Ukraine?s Key Stronghold of Vuhledar


Russia Tries Independent Election Monitor Co-Chair


Service Station Blast Kills 9 in Russia?s Dagestan


Gazprom Drops From Russia?s Most Profitable Company to Outside Forbes? Top 100


Russian Judge Who Convicted Gershkovich Says Court Did Not Examine Material Evidence


[Russia] - Finland to Place NATO Base Near Russian Border


[Russia] - Could a New Bill Allow Moscow to Hunt Down Anti-War ExilesA bill sent to the Russian parliament has actually raised worries that the countless Russian dissidents looking for political refuge in post-Soviet and other non-Western states could qu


Russian High School Students ?Sickened? by Graphic Abortion Video


[Russia] - Russian Defense Contractor Arrested for Supplying Faulty Equipment


Russian Prosecutors Seek Life Sentence for Nationalist Writer?s Alleged Attacker


[Russia] - U.S. Intel Warns of 'Lethal' Response From Moscow if Ukraine Strikes Deeper Into Russia-- NYT


Russia Puts Elderly American on Trial for ?Fighting? in Ukraine


[Russia] - Russia May Soon Block Discord-- Kommersant


Russia Charges Australian, Romanian Journalists Over Reporting From Kursk


[Russia] - Russian Internet Pioneer 'Dying in Prison,' Son Says


[Russia] - American Rejects U.S. Citizenship in Russian Court, Russian Media Says


Google Restricts Account Creation in Russia, Digital Ministry Says


Kremlin Says New Nuclear Doctrine Is 'Warning' to West


[Russia] - Russian Army Says Captured Town in Ukraine's Donetsk Region


Russia?s Belgorod Region to Equip School Buses With Anti-Drone Tech


Beer Sales Surge in Russia


Russia Returns 9 Ukrainian Children With Help From Qatar


Russia Convicts Nearly 800 Foreign Nationals Fighting for Ukraine Since 2014


Putin Proposes Broader Criteria for Using Nuclear Arms


[Russia] - Russian MPs Back Adoption Ban on Countries Allowing Gender Reassignment


[Russia] - Putin Says Expects Turkey's Erdogan at BRICS Summit


Zelensky Alleges Russia Plot on Nuclear Plants in Defiant UN Address


[Russia] - Russian Actor Roman Madyanov Dies Aged 62


[Russia] - Russian Church Non-Profit to Launch 'Orthodox WhatsApp'


Wildberries CEO?s Estranged Husband Says Kadyrov Helped Keep Him Alive


[Russia] - Russia Claims More Advances in Eastern Ukraine


Health of Kadyrov Critic?s Jailed Mother ?Close to Critical,? Lawyer Says


Forcing Russia Into Peace Would Be ?Fatal Mistake,? Kremlin Says


[Russia] - Moscow in Secret Talks to Supply Missiles to Iran-Backed Houthis-- Reuters


Putin Ally Matviyenko Re-Elected as Russia?s Upper House Speaker


Russia?s Primorye Region Outlaws ?Coercion? Into Abortion


[Russia] - Zelensky Says Russia ‘& lsquo; Can Only Be Forced Into Peace'Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky stated Tuesday that Russia can only be pushed into peace, as he knocked Iran and North Korea as accomplices in the war.Addressing a spec


[Russia] - With Presidential Internships, Kremlin Seeks to Paint Ukraine Veterans as Russia's 'New Elites'


[Russia] - Russian Strikes Kill 3, Injure Dozens in Ukraine's Kharkiv


Russian Warship Fires ?Warning Shot? at Norwegian Fishing Boat During Drills, Captain Claims


[Russia] - Russian City Tears Down War Veterans Park to Include Business Center


[Russia] - JPMorgan, HSBC Handled Payments for Wagner's Africa Operations-- Report


[Russia] - Iranian President to Meet With Putin During BRICS Summit


Russia Moves to Allow Criminal Defendants to Fight in Ukraine


[Russia] - Suspected Gunmen in Wildberries Shootout Ask to combat in Ukraine


3 Russian Men Arrested in Chad, Foreign Ministry Says


Moscow ?Extremely Concerned? Over Deadly Israeli Strikes in Lebanon


[Russia] - Russia to Boost Military Spending to 40% of State Budget in 2025-- Bloomberg


[Russia] - 2 Siberian Teenagers Charged With Terrorism for Setting Fire to Helicopter


[Russia] - Russia Jails U.S. Citizen on Kidnapping Charge


[Russia] - Russians Denying Medical Care to Ukraine Prisoners-- UN Experts


[Russia] - Russia Could Capture Ukrainian Stronghold of Vuhledar 'In Days,' Analyst Says


[Russia] - Russia Barred From 80th Anniversary of Auschwitz Liberation


[Russia] - Russia Extends Limits on Overseas Money Transfers for Another 6 Months


[Russia] - Russian Cosmonauts Return to Earth After Record ISS Stay


At Least 56 Russians Killed, 770 Missing Since Kursk Incursion, Officials Say


[Russia] - Japan Lodges Protest With Moscow After Airspace Violation


[Russia] - Kremlin Declines to Comment on Reports of Sarmat ICBM Explosion


[Russia] - Wildberries CEO Changes Surname Amid Feud With Estranged Husband


[Russia] - Teen Arrested After Attacking Classmates in Siberia's Irkutsk Region


[Russia] - 1 Killed, 23 Injured in Russian Attacks Across Ukraine


[Russia] - Russia's Sverdlovsk Region Increases Military Sign-Up Bonus Amid Recruitment Push


Russia Delays Launch of Digital Military Summons Until 2025, Lawmaker Says


[Russia] - Russia's FSB Detains 15 in North Caucasus for Spreading 'Extremist Ideology'Russia's Federal


[Russia] - Russian strike on Ukraine's Kharkiv injuries 21


[Russia] - Russia Says Will Not Attend Ukraine Peace Summit


[Russia] - Kyiv Says Struck Ammo Depots in Southern and Western Russia


[Russia] - Communist Lawmaker Accused of Inviting Sex Worker Into Russian Parliament


[Russia] - 70K Russian Soldiers Confirmed Killed in Ukraine-- Independent Tally


Russian Cities Cancel Pro-War Singer Shaman?s Shows Amid Low Ticket Sales ? Agentstvo


[Russia] - U.S. Grants Russian Protester Protection From Deportation After Illegal Entry


[Russia] - Guy Accused of Organizing Attack on Navalny Ally Volkov Arrested in Poland


Russian Man Jailed 8 Years for Murder of Gabonese Student


[Russia] - Moscow Rules Out Meeting Between Lavrov, Blinken at UN Assembly


Russian Soldiers Charged With Killing U.S. Man Who Fought for Moscow in Eastern Ukraine


Magnitude 4.5 Earthquake Rattles Siberia?s Kemerovo Region


Russian Army Knew of Possible Ukrainian Incursion Into Kursk Months in Advance ? The Guardian


[Russia] - TNT's Comedy Club to Air Final Episode After twenty years Amid Rumors of Revamp


[Russia] - Male Accused of Organizing Attack on Navalny Ally Volkov Arrested in Poland-- Reports


[Russia] - Putin Tours St. Petersburg Drone Manufacturing Plant


[Russia] - Wildberries Founder's Ex-Husband Arrested After Deadly Office Shootout


[Russia] - Russian Business Lobby Calls for Construction in Protected Forests to Boost Domestic Tourism


[Russia] - Telegram Founder Durov 'Not Interested' in Talking With Russian Officials, Envoy Says


[Russia] - Russia to Launch Undocumented Migrant Database Next Year


[Russia] - 'He Was Right All Along': 5 Years Since Arrest, Support for Anti-Putin Shaman Is Stronger Than Ever


[Russia] - Russia's FSB Busts Migrant Smuggling Ring Led by Nigerian Professor





66