Berliner Boersenzeitung - Kyiv's wartime Christmas showcases city's 'split' reality

EUR -
AED 4.328996
AFN 77.841091
ALL 96.56908
AMD 448.120599
ANG 2.110454
AOA 1080.922162
ARS 1711.263636
AUD 1.762143
AWG 2.124714
AZN 2.005137
BAM 1.958075
BBD 2.365627
BDT 143.546764
BGN 1.957253
BHD 0.444487
BIF 3470.761563
BMD 1.178759
BND 1.515774
BOB 8.13445
BRL 6.595632
BSD 1.174505
BTN 105.30204
BWP 15.491895
BYN 3.416205
BYR 23103.684451
BZD 2.362224
CAD 1.616462
CDF 2663.996409
CHF 0.929246
CLF 0.027339
CLP 1072.494333
CNY 8.299586
CNH 8.270388
COP 4471.541312
CRC 585.585265
CUC 1.178759
CUP 31.237124
CVE 110.393248
CZK 24.324113
DJF 209.154593
DKK 7.469863
DOP 73.51603
DZD 152.671689
EGP 55.945453
ERN 17.681391
ETB 182.065557
FJD 2.684565
FKP 0.875973
GBP 0.872223
GEL 3.164967
GGP 0.875973
GHS 13.421592
GIP 0.875973
GMD 86.641572
GNF 10269.017035
GTQ 9.001457
GYD 245.765515
HKD 9.16786
HNL 30.964235
HRK 7.538399
HTG 153.809339
HUF 390.397459
IDR 19779.582913
ILS 3.767445
IMP 0.875973
INR 105.663952
IQD 1538.887786
IRR 49625.77061
ISK 147.993336
JEP 0.875973
JMD 187.497824
JOD 0.835761
JPY 183.539912
KES 151.947443
KGS 103.081941
KHR 4712.494678
KMF 493.900526
KPW 1060.837509
KRW 1745.860227
KWD 0.361915
KYD 0.978937
KZT 605.743716
LAK 25444.559937
LBP 105181.416456
LKR 363.692516
LRD 207.893299
LSL 19.621095
LTL 3.48057
LVL 0.713019
LYD 6.373539
MAD 10.753693
MDL 19.888105
MGA 5291.429022
MKD 61.552358
MMK 2475.212378
MNT 4188.615156
MOP 9.413536
MRU 46.823794
MUR 54.199636
MVR 18.223318
MWK 2036.68965
MXN 21.158319
MYR 4.791624
MZN 75.275672
NAD 19.621095
NGN 1713.904465
NIO 43.230589
NOK 11.867137
NPR 168.507191
NZD 2.020205
OMR 0.453242
PAB 1.174765
PEN 3.955896
PGK 4.997849
PHP 69.370426
PKR 329.022278
PLN 4.221721
PYG 7936.142507
QAR 4.293788
RON 5.084929
RSD 117.392991
RUB 92.828091
RWF 1710.987721
SAR 4.421061
SBD 9.603057
SCR 16.169718
SDG 709.017246
SEK 10.851795
SGD 1.515224
SHP 0.884375
SLE 28.34946
SLL 24717.999784
SOS 670.178573
SRD 45.272023
STD 24397.939897
STN 24.528704
SVC 10.278941
SYP 13033.419542
SZL 19.613123
THB 36.671877
TJS 10.807355
TMT 4.125658
TND 3.436092
TOP 2.83817
TRY 50.478133
TTD 7.986278
TWD 37.11795
TZS 2912.094468
UAH 49.438724
UGX 4232.917545
USD 1.178759
UYU 46.043491
UZS 14092.371658
VES 332.598343
VND 31039.682184
VUV 143.268121
WST 3.281648
XAF 656.719937
XAG 0.016967
XAU 0.000263
XCD 3.185656
XCG 2.11716
XDR 0.816638
XOF 656.630705
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.137448
ZAR 19.667245
ZMK 10610.245676
ZMW 26.545235
ZWL 379.560049
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.37

    -0.07%

  • GSK

    -0.0200

    48.59

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    0.3000

    76.41

    +0.39%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.12

    -0.22%

  • RIO

    1.7800

    80.1

    +2.22%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.2

    -0.22%

  • BTI

    0.3200

    56.77

    +0.56%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    22.73

    -0.48%

  • BCC

    -0.5400

    74.23

    -0.73%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    15.36

    -2.08%

  • BP

    0.2000

    34.14

    +0.59%

  • RELX

    0.2500

    40.98

    +0.61%

  • AZN

    0.1900

    91.55

    +0.21%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.88

    +0.31%

Kyiv's wartime Christmas showcases city's 'split' reality
Kyiv's wartime Christmas showcases city's 'split' reality / Photo: Sergei GAPON - AFP

Kyiv's wartime Christmas showcases city's 'split' reality

Vlada Ovchinnikova stood posing for her boyfriend at a stall offering mugs of steaming wine, as children rode horses on a brightly-lit merry-go-round in front of a giant Christmas tree.

Text size:

It could be a Hallmark-worthy December scene from any city in Europe.

Except this is Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital under almost nightly air raid alerts, where Russian missiles and drones frequently slam into apartment buildings.

Christmas celebrations have nevertheless taken over the city, a festive showcase of how Kyiv's residents have been forced to juggle ordinary life with the reality of living in a country at war.

"People think we only get missiles and shelters. But we have holidays too. Taking photos, drinking mulled wine, eating tasty food, it's nice to switch," said Ovchinnikova, 25 and with bleach blond hair.

The dizzying contrast between the war's devastation and the holiday cheer was not lost on her.

"It's a very strange feeling. You wake up and find out that somewhere someone died, that in Kyiv someone died. And you go to work and it's like your mind is split."

"We usually don't think about it but then suddenly we remember -– damn, it really shouldn't be like this," she added.

The Winter Wonderland market at Kyiv's Expocenter welcomed over 330,000 people in the first three weeks of December.

Crowds pressed around an ice rink blasting Christmas classics, barely audible over the joyous screams of children swaying on a pendulum ride nearby.

Generators roared as they powered food courts and other attractions, intermittently hit by the power cuts caused by Russia's relentless barrage of Ukraine's energy infrastructure.

- 'The kids know' -

An estimated three million people live in the Ukrainian capital, where deadly strikes have grown more frequent throughout the war.

Svitlana Yakovleva tightly held her two grandchildren, Myroslava, 6, and Yevgen, 8, as they watched snowmen perform a choreographed rendition of a holiday mash-up.

"Our children want to feel happiness, to feel childhood," she said, her kohl-rimmed eyes filling with tears.

The 57-year-old grandma, or babusya, had a well-established routine for when Russia attacks.

At the sound of any air raid alert she takes out her phone, checking official information on where the missiles or attack drones are headed.

"We choose our own limits -- when to hide and when to ignore it," she said.

It is a familiar practice given that Russia has launched long-range strikes on all but five nights in 2025, according to AFP analysis of Ukrainian air force data.

"There are always power cuts at home," Myroslava grumbled.

The six-year-old has lived most of her life in a country at war.

"But we have inverters!" her older brother jumped in, referring to appliances that can maintain power.

"The kids know everything... They have adapted," their grandma said.

- 'Darkest times' -

Whether Ukraine's precious energy should be used on festivities is a source of debate.

"Decorative lighting, garlands are not a priority," Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said in early December, instructing citizens to reduce unnecessary consumption.

But some festivities have been accommodated ahead of Christmas, which in 2023 was officially moved to December 25, breaking with the Orthodox date of January 7 used in Russia.

In front of the golden domes of the 11th century Saint Sophia Cathedral in central Kyiv, a Christmas tree has been installed.

On Sunday, protesters lined in front of it to draw attention to the prisoners of war still held in Russia.

A fairground train carrying children made its way through the crowd, its Christmas soundtrack drowned out by the supportive honks of cars.

Many say they struggle to mark the occasion.

"Russians took away my sense of celebration a long time ago. It has never been the same as before," said Danylo Tkachenko, 27.

"Even in the darkest times -- literally dark, we are deprived of electricity due to constant attacks -- we continue to live. My friends are getting married, my relatives are having children," he added.

His friend Yelizaveta Irzhavska began tearing up.

Pointing to the nearby Saint Michael's Monastery, the 29-year-old said she was there just two days earlier for the funeral of a friend's husband, killed at the front.

"It hurts, but we need to keep living for the sake of those who are alive, for the sake of those who fought for us to even have this opportunity," she said in a low voice.

"Otherwise it will all have been in vain."

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)