the remains of a rocket are lodged in a tree
Nearly two-thirds of the village’s twenty or so houses were destroyed in the first weeks of the Russian assault last year
Signs on the metal gates of the bombed-out properties say: ‘There is an owner!’
small rural communities across Ukraine have been gradually disappearing for more quotidian reasons: the grind of rural poverty and depopulation
The residents doubt that they’re a priority for a cash-strapped government with thousands of towns to repair
Several locals wondered aloud whether their communities would be rebuilt at all
I met 66-year-old Viktor Petrovych cutting grass in the almost empty village of Verkholissia
Nearly half its houses were destroyed in the invasion
Russian soldiers had dug in at a school in the nearby village of Zhmiivka
from where they shot at Ukrainian positions in the area
‘We’re what you call a dying village
Zakharivka used to be a real one; buses go there.’
Volodymyr Hurzhenko is a starosta (local official) with responsibility for Zakharivka
‘Russian soldiers with Kadyrovtsy’ – Chechen fighters – ‘arrived in tanks and shot every building they could see from the street,’ he told me
There were Ukrainian positions in the forest behind the village
The detritus of a military foxhole is still there
Only six buildings were completely destroyed in Olyva; the Ukrainian troops who arrived told Hurzhenko that the village had been lucky
though the starosta’s office had been blown up by a grenade launcher
He described his neighbours’ attitude to reconstruction as ‘phlegmatic’
They know their villages are not a priority
But nothing will draw the younger population back now
The local authorities were pleased to show journalists the apartment blocks that have been rebuilt even while missiles rain down on Kyiv nightly
In Irpin I watched as rows of Soviet-era apartment blocks were demolished
A worker in a hard hat sized up a piece of Banksy graffiti to be dismounted and preserved
Cavities in the ground show where unsalvageable buildings once stood
who works on Irpin city council’s commission for utilities
explained that it’s bureaucratically easier to rebuild a multistorey building than to deal individually with thousands of separate householders
‘They use their own money and the money of whoever will help them
generally the money of international organisations or private sponsors
There’s not yet a centralised solution
but we’re trying,’ she told me
Ukrainian officials are quite candid about the inequalities
had suggested at a press conference in May that not all levels of government have the administrative resources to deal with such a complex task as reconstruction
‘The ability to co-operate effectively with international institutions also gives results depending on the village,’ he told me
‘Positive results and sometimes not so positive.’
One of Zakharivka’s few remaining residents is Tetyana Bityutskaya
who left Stakhanovka in the Luhansk Region in 2014 and after a period in Kyiv bought land in Zakharivka from an acquaintance
When the fighting started she fled through the forest
‘Then one morning our boys beat them
‘We came back and barely the walls were standing.’ She now lives in a portahouse with a fridge and running water
Entire rows of the temporary structures were installed in Bucha and Borodyanaka last spring
You see them here and there in the countryside around Kyiv
along with the occasional charred tank and the words ‘people live here’ scrawled in Russian on fences
Svetlana Vishchenko is still waiting for a portahouse
Invalids and families with children are first on the list
It was the scene of intense fighting; the Ukrainian army blew up the bridge to stop the Russian advance and the Russian air force blew up the village
‘I was lucky,’ Vishchenko said
pointing to an immense waterlogged crater nearby
‘She got a five hundred kilo bomb.’
a drone had crashed into an apartment block in Kyiv
the glass will be like new,’ Vishchenko said
‘They have a head of the building administration
It doesn’t take the owner of every flat to petition them to do something.’
Non-governmental organisations are doing what they can. The volunteers of Repair Together travel to rural areas to clear debris and lay bricks. An architecture firm in Kyiv has developed modelling software and instructions for rebuilding village houses
The hope is to preserve both the essence of the vernacular architecture and the agency of local residents while modernising where they live
officials come and go and ask the villagers to wait
And they’d rather wait on their own land
which they can at least use to feed themselves
‘You can’t send a country man like my father to live in a city apartment,’ Vishchenko said
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