Pictures of the Year International
Sponsored by
Prev
Award of Excellence: The Shelter of Hope
Next

Award of Excellence: The Shelter of Hope

A series of photographs that reflects a strong sense of identity or narrative. Respect for the dignity of the person is important.

Caption
Slide 6 of 9
April 9, 2022
"I'm Yulia from Donetsk Oblast. I came here with my family. In Donbass they provide us a green corridor to leave the city as fast as possible and save our family. We came to Kramatorsk and waited at the train station for 5 hours and left there at 21:00 pm. The children were in a panic. The road takes 37 hours. The train passes through the front line of the war. Thank God we arrived here safely and here they welcomed us with respect and love. We are grateful to the city of Lviv and its volunteers. We came here with my daughter Kamila, my daughter Karolina and her son Daniil, Liudmila, son Renat and my mother, Natalia.”
Location

    The Shelter of Hope

    The Rusian-Ukrainian war officially started with the entry of Russian troops into the country following the Russian airstrike against Ukraine on February 24. With the start of the war, people began to come to Lviv from cities where the war was most severe, such as Kyiv, Kramatorsk, Kharkiv, Bucha and Mariupol. While some of the victims of war, Ukrainians, who reached millions in a very short time, migrated to neighboring countries, others began to wait for the day they could return to their homes in the shelters allocated for them in Lviv. One of these shelters is the gym located in Stryiskyi Park of Lviv Polytechnic University, which provides 7-day shelter. In the limited conditions of the hall, about three hundred war victims are hosted for a week until they find another place or a place is arranged for them. The common dreams of these hundreds of people, who set out from different places with common reasons, common fears and sorrows, is that the war will end as soon as possible and that they can return to their homes and loved ones whom they hope are still alive. The areas where young people trained with joy and enthusiasm before the war, now host people whose eyes are filled with joy, sadness, longing, fear, hatred and anger, who still cannot believe how they saved themselves from the black hole called war. When I got there, all I could do was listen to those who wanted to tell their stories and try to explain it with photos.

    5141c141-1127-499d-81df-f898c88decfa
    5cfe48ef-ac31-4e51-bf0d-d7e1f897244d
    b5b9d767-7756-4415-a9d0-1a33edb15061
    d6fd6579-9f6d-413d-a880-8374af1a3489
    556b8d63-b74c-4367-9ead-af1772b651b6
    2988d288-6ae4-4773-9ab3-f1d7808fdcce
    fdc1997c-5081-44f0-af1c-d5699bfb0e7b
    ce58462b-c90b-4736-9b5e-acdae625bbd4
    c499315e-3fee-48c8-9416-bb62a69b21bc