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Friday, September 27, 2024
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Ukraine first lady wants country's kids to see themselves as 'generation of winners' not war victims

publish time

28/08/2024

publish time

28/08/2024

XEL103
Ukraine's First Lady Olena Zelenska talks with children during her visit to the rehabilitation camp 'Loud Camp' for children affected by war, organized by the Voices of Children Charitable Foundation and financially supported by the Olena Zelenska Foundation in Uzhhorod, Ukraine on Aug 27. (AP)

UZHHOROD, Ukraine, Aug 28, (AP): Ukraine’s first lady wants her country’s children to view themselves not as a generation enduring a grinding war, but rather as "a generation of winners.” On the sidelines of a day spent at a rehabilitation camp for Ukrainian children in the relatively safe western city of Uzhhorod, Olena Zelenska said Tuesday that working with the next generation was both a moral obligation and a "strategic priority” for Ukraine’s future.

Many of the children will return to front-line cities after spending a few weeks at the camp, barely enough time to overcome the trauma they face over and over. "This issue needs to be addressed immediately, as soon as it arises, before it grows into something more,” Zelenska told The Associated Press in a brief interview at the camp.

The foundation that bears her name, which is funded entirely by foreign donations, created the camp along with the Voices of the Children charity. A study by the Olena Zelenska Foundation and the Kyiv School of Economics this year found that 44% of Ukrainian children show signs of post-traumatic stress disorder. Dressed casually with white sneakers, black pants, a white T-shirt and pearls around her neck, Zelenska blended into the camp’s activities with the children. Since the start of the war, she has emerged as an unofficial ambassador for Ukraine globally.

She was the first from President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's family to leave the country after Russia invaded in February 2022 to promote Ukraine's cause. But she is equally active within Ukraine, and easily recognizable to the displaced families and wounded soldiers she visits. At the camp, she joined an art therapy session midway, sitting beside a boy whose home was struck by an aerial bomb and who was later forced to evacuate from his hometown ahead of the Russian advance this summer.