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‘We still believe’: Makeshift centers provide food, warmth in Ukraine

Retired Ukrainian construction worker Borys Markovnikov is on the move again: this time, just a few steps from his home in the town of Bucha, northwest of Kyiv, to seek shelter and warmth at a “Point of Invincibility” – a government-built help station that serves food, drinks, warmth, and ultimately, resilience, in the face of Russia’s military onslaught.

In recent weeks, Ukraine has rolled out hundreds of such help stations, christened with a name of defiance, as places where residents facing outages of power, heating, and water can warm up, charge their phones, enjoy snacks and hot drinks, and even be entertained.

Mr. Markovnikov has had to move a few times. He recalled how he was driven from his home in the eastern Donbas region after Russian-backed separatists seized territory there in 2014. Earlier this year, he fled his adopted town of Bucha – now infamous for massacres during a brief occupation by Russian forces – on foot, across the front line, to Kyiv. Later, he was able to return home, but home is not always an easy place to live.

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