Halyna used to live in Mariupol and work at the "Halabuda" educational hub. The hub was converted into a volunteer center on the first day of the full-scale war. The city was sieged and shelled extensively, and Halyna was one of those who helped the Mariupol citizens survive. At last, she had to evacuate from Mariupol.
At the time of publication, Halyna lives in Lviv. The "Halabuda" team managed to resume its operations in different cities.
Hundreds of thousands of people come to Lviv from the Ukrainian regions, assaulted by the Russian army. Located in the rear of the Russian-Ukrainian war, Lviv is a hub for military and humanitarian aid from the West. Many volunteer initiatives operate here. Despite several missile attacks targeting military objects around Lviv, the western media call it "a safe city." Is this truly so? Does the urban space reflect the signs of the current war? What stories do the people, who came here because of military action, carry with them?
The mission of the "02/24: Life After" project is to document the experiences of the people whose lives changed after the full-scale war has started. We ask them to describe their recent days and plans for the future. We hope to meet them after the victory and learn how their war stories ended, whether they achieved what they hoped for.
The "02/24: Life After" project is a joined effort of NGO "After Silence," Wanna production and cultural manager Maria Kravchenko.
This video was supported by Goethe-Institut and the Federal German Cultural Foundation.
The "02/24: Life After" project is supported by the Heinrich Böll Foundation Kyiv, Ukraine; the "Connecting Memory" project of the Foundation Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe; the IWM's Documenting Ukraine project.
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