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Near Ukraine war’s front lines, threatened villages try to build a future

From Staryi Saltiv’s brand-new school building, one can see smoke rising from a distant town across the river valley. That juxtaposition starkly illustrates the hope and trepidation that permeate dozens of villages along the Ukraine war’s front lines.

Staryi Saltiv’s school was built to replace one destroyed by Russia in 2022, when Ukraine recaptured the lakeside resort village in a counteroffensive that fall.

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For small villages near the front lines of Russia’s war in eastern Ukraine, the ebb and flow of territorial conquest can make it hard to have confidence in the future. Providing hope is one job of community leaders.

“If there is no school, no hospital, and no state services, people won’t stay here or consider coming back,” says Anton Palyey, Staryi Saltiv’s military-appointed administrator.

“Our job as a government is to show the local people that these villages are not abandoned, that they can feel confident that there is a future for this place.”

That determination to keep Ukraine’s traumatized villages alive can be seen across Staryi Saltiv – from the numerous construction projects to the vegetable gardens behind many houses.

“I’ve decided I’m not afraid anymore,” says Lidiia Chatchenko, the unofficial mayor of a small village outside Staryi Saltiv, noting she is careful not to sound too naively optimistic. “I’m just going to do what I can to help the people of my village who only want to be able to remain in their homes.”

Anton Palyey stands proudly before the new three-story school building, its cheery accents of bright paint soon to greet returning students.

It was built to replace the school destroyed by Russian shelling in 2022, when enemy forces occupied this lakeside resort village just 12 miles from the Russian border. Staryi Saltiv was recaptured in a counteroffensive in the fall of 2022.

“If there is no school, no hospital, and no state services, people won’t stay here or consider coming back,” says Mr. Palyey, who has served as Staryi Saltiv’s military-appointed administrator since Ukrainian forces took the village back.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

For small villages near the front lines of Russia’s war in eastern Ukraine, the ebb and flow of territorial conquest can make it hard to have confidence in the future. Providing hope is one job of community leaders.

Pointing to the northern horizon, where a plume of dark smoke rises over the town of Vovchansk – destroyed in a surprise Russian cross-border offensive in May – the village administrator describes his job as equal parts services provider and chief reassurer/morale booster.

“With a so-called neighbor like the one we have, capable of doing that at any moment,” he says, nodding toward the smoke, “it’s understandable that people feel so much fear about living here.”

“Our job as a government,” he adds, “is to show the local people that these villages are not abandoned, that they can feel confident that there is a future for this place.”

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