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Kherson survived Russian occupation. Now winter tests liberation.

When Russian troops retreated last month from the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson, and Ukrainian forces marched in to liberate the regional capital, the mood among residents was jubilant.

Five weeks on, the harsh realities of life are testing Khersonians’ staying power: Russian artillery units are still bombarding the city, and before the Russians left they destroyed, and mined, as much infrastructure as they could.

Why We Wrote This

In Kherson, freed last month from Russian occupation, jubilation has turned to determination as residents face winter without heat, light, or running water.

That means electricity, water, and heat are all in short supply as winter sets in. Residents can generally get potable water from tankers that resupply them each day, but they have to go to the river, the Dnieper, for the water they use to wash in.

“This is not normal,” says one local resident. “Everyone is just trying to survive.”

Some residents find it all too much, and have gone to live elsewhere in Ukraine, often with relatives. Others are sticking with it, despite the artillery shells, the shortages, the high prices, and the cold.

“If we were able to survive nine months of occupation, I’m quite sure we will be able to survive this,” says Oleksandr Popov, an IT specialist. “It’s much easier and simpler when our people, our army, are here.”

In Kherson’s central plaza, Oleksandr Popov and his wife Olha tiptoe gingerly back to their car, loaded with diapers and baby food.

Five weeks ago, thousands of Ukrainians celebrated their city’s liberation from Russian occupation in this same plaza, hugging soldiers and waving flags. Today the streets are covered with black ice, the city is largely without power, and the Popovs just picked up supplies from a van distributing humanitarian aid. Without it, they couldn’t provide for their 4-month-old son Yehor, layered in coats, asleep in his mother’s arms.  

“Unfortunately, you can’t get this stuff here in the shops now,” says Ms. Popova.

Why We Wrote This

In Kherson, freed last month from Russian occupation, jubilation has turned to determination as residents face winter without heat, light, or running water.

The three of them reach their taxi, an old Ford driven by their neighbor, and ride the few miles home. On the way, they pass playgrounds, gardens, and swing sets. They point to broken windows and splotchy holes in the nearby buildings: shell damage, they say.

Eight floors up, their own apartment windows are covered in tarps; an artillery barrage last month blew the glass out. When the shells landed, Mr. Popov was outside with Yehor; he fled into a neighboring building, which he could only get into because there was no electricity to power the lock. Ms. Popova and their 16-year-old daughter ducked for cover outside their apartment. Artem, their 11-year-old son, jumped under a first-floor balcony. One of the shells cratered the pavement where he and a group of friends had just been playing soccer.

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