Posted on Sep 17, 2022
For older Ukrainians in front-line cities, visits from social workers bring comfort
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https://www.npr.org/2022/09/16/ [login to see] /ukraine-social-workers-elderly
On the fourth floor of an apartment building, Larisa lives alone. The 76-year-old uses a walker to move around, and she can't go up or down stairs. She hasn't ventured outside since before Russia invaded Ukraine.
Only three people remain in her building, a reflection of how this front-line city in the east has fared. The hallways in the building are still littered with broken glass, the windows shattered from a recent missile strike that hit the building across the street.
It's a lonely existence for Larisa, whose brother and sister both live elsewhere in Ukraine. But she says it would be even harder if Svitlana Domoratska, a city social worker, didn't visit multiple times a week.
On the fourth floor of an apartment building, Larisa lives alone. The 76-year-old uses a walker to move around, and she can't go up or down stairs. She hasn't ventured outside since before Russia invaded Ukraine.
Only three people remain in her building, a reflection of how this front-line city in the east has fared. The hallways in the building are still littered with broken glass, the windows shattered from a recent missile strike that hit the building across the street.
It's a lonely existence for Larisa, whose brother and sister both live elsewhere in Ukraine. But she says it would be even harder if Svitlana Domoratska, a city social worker, didn't visit multiple times a week.
For older Ukrainians in front-line cities, visits from social workers bring comfort
Posted from npr.org
Posted 2 y ago
Responses: 1
Edited 2 y ago
Posted 2 y ago
Svitlana and tthe other social workers are true heroes to these elderly people, they are a true blessing to them shipmate PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
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