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Kyiv’s aged endure blackouts and bombardment, clinging to heat and hope
The Tycoon Herald > World > Kyiv’s aged endure blackouts and bombardment, clinging to heat and hope
World

Kyiv’s aged endure blackouts and bombardment, clinging to heat and hope

Tycoon Herald
By Tycoon Herald 9 Min Read Published February 28, 2026
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Kyiv’s aged endure blackouts and bombardment, clinging to heat and hope

Nelia Stepanivna Thomashevska, an 80-year-old resident of Kyiv, Ukraine, waves from her kitchen window.

Eleanor Beardsley/NPR


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Eleanor Beardsley/NPR

KYIV, Ukraine — There’s electrical energy on Kyiv’s left financial institution as we speak, so a small elevator carries guests as much as Liliya Martynivna Lapina’s Tenth-floor residence. The 88-year-old has been spending her days in her mattress below a pile of blankets by a vivid however chilly window, attempting to remain heat.

She sits bolt upright and appears to come back alive as guests enter her residence, erupting in a stream of phrases and enthusiasm over the care package deal of pasta, sugar, tea and cooking oil that has been delivered. Lapina is carrying a number of layers of colourful wool sweaters and a scarf.

Liliya Martynivna Lapina, 88, wears a colorful knitted sweater and vest, as well as a headscarf. She's standing next to a bed, which has multiple blankets on it. Behind her is a window.

Liliya Martynivna Lapina, 88, lives on the Tenth ground of her constructing and should use the steps when energy cuts disable the elevator.

Eleanor Beardsley/NPR


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Eleanor Beardsley/NPR

NPR is accompanying the help group Starenki, which delivers meals and fellowship to the principally older folks caught of their flats this winter as they attempt to survive the frequent warmth and energy cuts introduced on by Russia’s assault on Ukraine’s vitality infrastructure.

Ice fishing is a peaceful retreat for war-weary Ukrainians

As Russian President Vladimir Putin fails to make important progress on the battlefield, he’s attempting to interrupt the Ukrainian folks’s will by plunging them into the chilly and darkish in one of many coldest winters in years. The capital, Kyiv, has been significantly laborious hit. Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko urged those that might to go away town. However many individuals, particularly older adults, have nowhere else to go.

“The left bank of the Dnieper River has been very hard hit by Russian strikes, leaving most people in the dark for days on end,” says Alina Diachenko, director of Starenki. “Their houses are without warmth and without electricity, and the old people try to heat themselves by wearing more clothes and turning on the gas of their stoves. They suffer a lot.”

A woman carrying a bouquet of yellow and white flowers walks past a high-rise residential building heavily damaged by a Russian drone strike in the Shevchenkivskyi district of Kyiv, Ukraine, on May 25, 2025.

However on today, Lapina is animated. Her cluttered residence is crammed with Japanese Orthodox icons. She says God will punish Russia for what it is doing. And she or he drastically admires Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy:

“Our president is wonderful,” she says. “I listen to him on the radio. Nobody else could do what he does. And he’s Jewish. They are very good people, the Jews. … And God is a Jew.”

Three women who are volunteers with the aid group Starenki stand outside the entrance to a multistory apartment building. They are wearing winter coats and knitted caps. The woman in the middle is holding a large plastic bag that says Starenki on it.

Volunteers with the help group Starenki ship meals and fellowship to the principally older folks caught in Kyiv’s tall buildings.

Eleanor Beardsley/NPR


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Eleanor Beardsley/NPR

Natalia Zaitseva, one of many volunteers with Starenki, has two kids, an getting old mom and a job in IT, however she nonetheless finds time to assist these much less lucky.

“Children and older people are my passion,” she says, “especially if I see someone who hasn’t any friends or family. It gives me a lump in my throat, and I want to cry.”

Greetings from Ukraine, where churchgoers seek respite ahead of another winter at war

Zaitseva calls up on the intercom for the group’s subsequent go to — to Olga Ivanivna. Our group avoids a blinking, sketchy-looking elevator and decides to climb the 9 flights of stairs to her residence.

Ivanivna, 78, opens the door, additionally carrying layers and a wool cap, although there was electrical energy for the previous couple of days. “Thank God,” she says. “Otherwise it’s freezing and there’s no water.”

Standing in her apartment, Olga Ivanivna, 78, holds a framed photo of her adult son, who died five years ago. She is wearing a sweater and knitted vest, as well as a knitted cap. Multiple potted plants are behind her.

Olga Ivanivna, 78, holds an image of her son, a physician, who died 5 years in the past.

Eleanor Beardsley/NPR


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Eleanor Beardsley/NPR

Ivanivna says nobody else comes to go to her, so she’s very appreciative of the staples and the camaraderie that Starenki brings.

She reveals us a photograph of her son — a physician — who took care of her earlier than he died 5 years in the past. “My good health departed along with him,” she says.

However she nonetheless retains her son’s home vegetation alive. Every kind of potted and hanging vegetation fill the entrance room with its giant, vivid window.

On the subsequent residence, our group is greeted by Irma, a soulful-eyed, ferocious lapdog. Irma’s mistress, Vira Pavlivna Romanchyk, stands behind her walker. She’s almost blind. She says her son will get her groceries.

“But Irma is my best support,” she says. “She sits by my side all day long, keeping me company and protecting me.”

 Photographed through a doorway within her home, Nelia Stepanivna Thomashevska, 80, is wearing a long brown sweater coat and is standing next to a table with a large plastic bag on it. Two large bottles of water are on the floor.

Nelia Stepanivna Thomashevska, 80, is a widow. Her husband, who had been a Soviet air drive pilot, died in a helicopter crash.

Eleanor Beardsley/NPR


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Eleanor Beardsley/NPR

Hennadii Fil, 65, former deputy Commander of the 309th Missile Regiment near Soviet air defense missile at the Museum of the Strategic Missile Forces on Dec. 5, 2025.

The ultimate go to is to 80-year-old Nelia Stepanivna Thomashevska, who’s to know what sort of journalists we’re earlier than telling us about her life. Thomashevska’s husband was a Soviet navy pilot, they usually lived for a short while in Russia’s far east. However he died in a helicopter crash in 1974. The couple had no kids. She says that when she was youthful, she was fairly lively in her residence constructing’s cooperative.

Multiple pots and a kettle sit on the four burners of a stove. The walls behind the stove and to the right of it are covered in sandy-brown tiles.

Thomashevska’s kitchen in her constructing in Kyiv.

Eleanor Beardsley/NPR


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Eleanor Beardsley/NPR

Standing in her tiny kitchen with its outdated home equipment and range, she tells us that she fears going with out energy greater than the airstrikes. She factors up on the mild within the kitchen. “Losing electricity and heating,” she says. However as we speak the kitchen radiator is heat. Thomashevska opens the smudged kitchen window to sprinkle some seeds on the windowsill. Quickly pigeons arrive, cooing and flapping.

She additionally has two cats. She says they assist her in the course of the nightly drone and missile assaults. “My cats go under the covers because they know ahead of time that there’s going to be explosions,” she says. “It’s instinct. They jump under the covers and know before me there’s going to be an airstrike.”

However none of this appears to have sapped her will.

“We will hold on, we will survive and we will win,” she says.

“Heroiam slava,” she says to us in Ukrainian in a phrase which means “Glory to the heroes.” Whereas it may be mentioned alone, it’s also the second half of a call-and-response that Ukrainians start with “Slava Ukraini” — Glory to Ukraine.

Photographed from indoors through a closed window, multiple pigeons perch on the windowsill outside the window. Behind them is a snowy scene with leafless trees.

Pigeons collect on Thomashevska’s windowsill, the place she feeds them.

Eleanor Beardsley/NPR


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Eleanor Beardsley/NPR

As we stroll away from Thomashevska’s residence constructing by way of the snow, she opens her fourth-floor kitchen window and calls out to us, surrounded by pigeons.

Ukraine invasion — explained

“Garnogo dnya!” we name up from the road in Ukrainian: Have day.

Tending to her pigeons, Thomashevska waves us goodbye.

NPR producer Polina Lytvynova contributed to this report in Kyiv, Ukraine.

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