It started with a sprint and goes into a marathon relay race with hurdles.

What have we learned after more than two months of the Russian war in Ukraine?  Is there something that we didn’t know before?

On February 24, 2022 everybody seemed to be in the starting blocks. There was no space for the intricacies of a starter pistol. At 05:00 AM Russia gave the signal to run with ballistic missiles fired at Ukrainian airports and heavy artillery shelling at the borders.

Everybody was ready for a sprint which gradually went into a hurdle race then a long marathon and now becoming a relay marathon run.

The Polish sprint to the border to assist and support the first waves of refugees caused roads in south-eastern Poland to be displayed in purple on Google maps. Some cars returned empty as the border procedures were slow at first, causing kilometer-long lines of mothers with children waiting in hostile February weather conditions. I remember Tanya from Kyiv who stood for 25 hours tormenting herself with the blame of abandoning the country and exposing her children to the unknown length of the line in front, or even more unknown on the other side of the border.  Soon the volunteer tents were set up along the line of people to provide food and shelter. Victoria—who fled the bombing of the Kharkiv block of flats— when reminded by a young Polish volunteer that smoking kills, instantly fired back that, “bombs kill more.” There was laughter.

COVID-19 restrictions gave way in the light of the humanitarian crisis unfolding. The very same people who only a few months earlier were convinced to consider which family member shall be invited to the Christmas table were now taking total strangers into their cars and homes. The 74 year-old Oleksiy from Kyiv, a man who was one of the clean-up people at the Chornobyl plant asked me a question after four hours of driving. “And how about COVID in Poland?” We just gave each other a look and burst out laughing.

The last two months were the management of chaos in an attempt to help and learn how to help better.

It has been a busy time when many Poles and people from all over Europe suspended their previous lives to give first-response and follow an instinct to provide humanitarian aid. To be frank, I think that we provide help also for very selfish and private reasons.  The first two days of sitting at home and vehemently scrolling the news were driving me to the point of madness. Going out there and providing help was for me a good way to protect my sanity in the shattered reality around.

Refugees at the crossroads

Refugees just after crossing the border are still haunted and traumatized by imagery and sounds of war but they need to make a life-changing decision about what next.  Shall we stay or shall we go? Where to stay and how to go? At this very moment in most cases, they have no idea that boarding a bus from a charity organization from Denmark or Germany instead of waiting at the overcrowded reception center has future implications for them and their children. Many of them are at their weakest, yet the reality is demanding they take sharp and informed decisions about their future.

There is always hope that the war will be short and these people will stay close for returning and rebuilding Ukraine ASAP. This is mixed with a sense of guilt for abandoning the country in need. The realization that future Ukraine needs its civilians alive sinks in very slowly. There is always extreme tiredness, lack of sleep, no luggage, lack of documents, and in most cases crossing the Ukrainian border for the very first time in their lives when their loved ones are still on the other side.

Can you take an informed decision about your future in such a moment of distress?

The moment when you’re gasping for a minute of rest to collect one’s thoughts.

What next…?

We are more than two months into the war and it was an intensive time of travel and logistics for me. After 20 years of working in inbound tourism, I have started to do lots of outbound travel and sorting of living arrangements for our Ukrainian sisters and brothers. Transportation, a safe home and a bit of rest are needed first. Discussion about life alternatives next. Nina escaped from Kyiv with her mother and 6 year-old bedridden son. Lydia and Igor run from Kharkiv after 3 weeks of heavy Russian shelling.  An amazing chain of people built a social media life rope to take Lydia and her son to Portugal and Nina with her family to Greece. After hundreds of messages on every available online communicator people travel far into safety.

It is hard to describe how this life rope looks, but let me try.

The people of first contact are the volunteers at the border and drivers who, after February 24, often suspended their lives to show up in the first row of help. They open their hearts and extend their hands to prevent the fall into the unknown or at least to make this transition smooth and painless. Some of them enter Ukraine; some stay on the Polish side

Then comes the little army of those who open their homes and apartments to host and give shelter. Often the less they have the more they share. Often, they instantly react to despairing FB adverts about apartments needed now for a family of six. Despite a midnight arrival, they are ready with a smile, mattresses, and a couple of words in a bit of rusty school Russian. With an apology in their eyes that this is the best they can give and add some softness to those Russian words so that they don’t sound overly Russian.

I have met only some of them, but adored every minute of our task-oriented conversations.

The first days have shown the moral strength of some institutions and devotion to their founding values. It is not always easy to put those values into action. But it was a matter of one phone call at any time of day or night to hear the very needed words “yes we have space” at MDSM Oświęcim, Centrum Dialogu i Modlitwy in Oświęcim, or the refugee center in Cracow run by Salam Lab, Zustricz Foundation, JCC Cracow and UAinKrakow.pl.

Keyboard warriors

I have been struggling with social media for years, promising myself to quit under the next and next algorithm change towards 100% commercialization and sale of private life content. The last month showed the better face of social media as a logistics tool. A tool that is the first response instinct replaced state structures burdened by red tape. Thousands of fixers started groups like “Help for Ukraine” or “Transport from the Border” and combed the forums daily looking for matches. They keep the market of needs and help offers in balance. Mother with a child, driver, number of seats, translator, Polish SIM card, apartment, humanitarian aid, clothing, and work became the magic spell words for people making the matches. Yes, you can help very effectively from behind your computer screen and every next match meant a Ukrainian mother with a child having a place to stay overnight or over a month. It became an addictive game on the screen but with real-life results. It sometimes meant as little as a driver who spent 12 hours from the Korczowa PL-UA border to Berlin returning the next day to hand a birthday gift to nine year-old Alisa from Kharkiv. Alisa was his passenger the previous day and night.

At times it meant as much as Viber, FB, What’ Up and Messenger coordinated travel for Lydia and Igor from the Russian-shelled Saltivka District of Kharkiv into a warm Polish home in Zelkow. The same social media channels with fixers were used two weeks later to take them from Zelkow to Lisbon. I would never have expected that one can use social media to make people cross the formal borders with just Ukrainian certificates of birth. The Portuguese Embassy in Warsaw was responsive through Viber and produced travel papers instantly as the Portuguese charity chain run by Diogo Monteiro from Warsaw covered the costs and logistics of the flight.

Nina and Lydia landed with their families in Greece and Portugal in late March, and I have made a promise to bring them back into free Ukraine once they and their country are ready to meet again.

Social media works, as every piece of technology becomes its worst or its best in our hands. I have seen social media at its best over the last month, or rather I have seen thousands of often anonymous fixers using social media responsively and responsibly to give hope or save lives.

Special thanks go to “keyboard warriors” I have met, although I know that they are engaged in every other forms of help as well.

Everybody was ready for a sprint which gradually went into a hurdle race then a long marathon and now becoming a relay marathon run.

Running has never been my sport and I have major issues with crowds, but during the last weeks it was a pleasure and honor to take part in and observe this mass relay marathon run towards unity and help.

Tomasz Cebulski holds a PhD in political science, he is a genealogist and author of “Auschwitz after Auschwitz”. He is a founder of Polin Travel – Guide and Genealogy  and of Sky Heritage Pictures for narrative and visual interpretation of the history of Polish Jewry at historical sites and museums. 

 

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and are not necessarily those of the Kyiv Post