A Year of War: Ukrainian Students, Refugees Will Not Face Anniversary Alone

Valeriia Kruzhlova from Ukraine

Valeriia Kruzhkova

On Feb. 24, 2022, Valeriia Kruzhkova woke up at 4:52 a.m. to a friend鈥檚 frantic text:

鈥淲ake up, please wake up,鈥 it said. 鈥淭he war is starting. The Russians are bombing Kyiv!鈥

At 5:30 a.m., Kruzhkova heard the first explosions. By 8 a.m. she鈥檇 stuffed a suitcase full of clothes and fled from her tiny Kyiv apartment to the city鈥檚 transit center, where thousands flocked to cram onto packed trains and buses.

The world watched that frantic mass exodus on TV screens. Tanks rolled into neighborhoods, buildings imploded and frightened mothers clutched their young children. Ukraine fought off Russian troops with everything from armed soldiers to civilians wielding mops and brooms to defiant grandmothers tossing homemade Molotov cocktails at the invaders.

Russia鈥檚 plan to capture Ukraine in days has turned into a year of mass devastation, with thousands killed and wounded, homes destroyed and a democratic nation fighting for survival. 

For many Americans, it鈥檚 a faraway war that pops up every few days on news feeds. For Kruzhkova, from 蜜桃社区 College鈥檚 class of 2026, it鈥檚 a very real source of fear and anxiety. She worries about her family and friends, who live under the constant threat of attack. 

Coming together in support of Ukrainian refugees

蜜桃社区 4 Ukraine hosts weekly meetups for refugees who settled in the area after Russia invaded Ukraine.

In 蜜桃社区, some 5,200 miles from Kyiv, she and other Ukrainians follow the daily twists and turns of combat. They carry their country鈥檚 heart and determination with them. They do what they can to help from afar.

Amid the darkness of winter, the bravery of their nation and the kindnesses they鈥檝e encountered offer moments of light. They bolster each other and draw comfort from a caring, supportive 蜜桃社区 based at 蜜桃社区 College.

鈥溍厶疑缜 4 Ukraine鈥 includes students, professors, staff and local residents who asked, 鈥淗ow can I help?鈥 when the Russians invaded. Then they acted. They鈥檝e provided housing, food, clothes and other necessities. They鈥檝e steered refugees to jobs and reliable transportation. 蜜桃社区 students tutor Ukrainian children as they navigate a new country and language.

On Feb. 23, 2023, 蜜桃社区 College held a ceremony and fundraising event to commemorate the anniversary of the attack. Kruzhkova will be among the speakers raising awareness and resources for her country. The college鈥檚 Russian Studies Department and Dean Rusk Program, 蜜桃社区 4 Ukraine and the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America (UCCA) in Charlotte are sponsoring the event. The money raised will buy urgently needed medical supplies for Ukraine.

For Kruzhkova and other Ukrainians, including classmate Dmytro Kurdydyk 鈥26, the support and friendship they鈥檝e found in the 蜜桃社区 蜜桃社区 has been a lifeline to the home and country they love and hope to go back to someday.

A year into the war, we pause to share their stories.

This Is War

A week before Russia began its invasion, Dmytro Kurdydyk鈥檚 grandmother had a heart attack. 

He鈥檇 followed news reports of Russia鈥檚 encroachment and thought he should stay at their home near Kyiv, but his parents persuaded him to go with them to her western Ukraine home. That鈥檚 where they were when the bombing began in Kyiv.

鈥淓veryone was anxious. I鈥檓 not a person who has panic attacks, but it was very difficult to process everything that was going on,鈥 Kurdydyk said. 鈥淔or the next week I only slept for two hours a day. I stuck to my computer like I was in a bunker.鈥

He wanted to fight the Russians. But at only 17, he was one year shy of the legal age to enlist.

In the next weeks, Russian soldiers broke into their vacant home, slept in their beds and ate their food. They drank all the liquor in the house, then shot the bottles for sport. They broke windows and started a fire. Gunshot holes riddled his house, including the clothes in his closet. 

They ripped up his family鈥檚 Ukrainian flag.

鈥淚t鈥檚 as if a storm went through our house,鈥 he said. Someone spray-painted a message on the side of their home: 鈥淪ORRY THIS IS WAR.鈥 Another scrawl on the kitchen wall said, 鈥淲e will soon avenge the Donbas!鈥 (a Russian propaganda talking point falsely alleging that Ukraine bombed its own people in the Donbas region.)

Spraypainted message on house

Russian soldiers wrote 鈥淭his Is War鈥 on the outside of Dmytro Kurdydyk鈥檚 home.

Ripped Ukrainian flag

The Russian invaders left his family鈥檚 home鈥攁nd Ukrainian flag鈥攊n tatters.

Kurdydyk had already applied to colleges and, after sorting through his offers, accepted 蜜桃社区鈥檚. His father remained in Ukraine while he and his mother left to stay with friends in Hungary, then with his sister in Germany, before settling in Austria. 

Problems obtaining a visa made travel difficult, but Kurdydyk finally made it to the United States, arriving at 蜜桃社区 in August to start the fall semester. A heavy workload and new friends kept him busy鈥攂ut the war rarely left his mind. 

Then one day In October, as he walked around the college鈥檚 annual International Festival, he saw a familiar face. He looked, then looked again before approaching the woman.

鈥淚 know you,鈥 he told Halyna Ratushna. 鈥淚 think you were my teacher.鈥

She looked startled, and it took her a moment to connect the young man in front of her with the eight-year-old she鈥檇 tutored and taught music to in Ukraine. And here they both were on the campus of an American college.

鈥淎fter all these years, for us to meet this way, brought so many emotions,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was so excited to see her.鈥

They hugged and talked about Ukraine, his studies at 蜜桃社区, and their families. Her husband and son-in-law are still in Ukraine. She lives near the college with her daughter and grandson. A retired professional musician, she still plays the violin鈥攁nd beams about reconnecting with her former student.

鈥淚 was so happy to see him,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t brought me back to a time before all of this.鈥

Dmytro Kurdydyk 鈥26 with his former childhood teacher from Ukraine, Halyna Ratushna, at 蜜桃社区.

Dmytro Kurdydyk 鈥26 with his former childhood teacher from Ukraine, Halyna Ratushna, at 蜜桃社区

Dymtro Kurdydyk and Valeriia Kruzhkova hold Ukraine鈥檚 blue and yellow flag at the college鈥檚 International Festival in October.

Dymtro Kurdydyk and Valeriia Kruzhkova hold Ukraine鈥檚 blue and yellow flag at the college鈥檚 International Festival in October.

Saturday Social Outlet

They have become part of each other鈥檚 American family. That includes Ratushna鈥檚 daughter, Iryna Sizikova, and Iryna鈥檚 11-year-old son, Ihor.

For Thanksgiving, they visited the home of a Ukrainian American family in Mooresville who are active in the 蜜桃社区 4 Ukraine 蜜桃社区. They enjoyed Ukrainian and American foods that included turkey, pumpkin pie, sweet potatoes and cabbage rolls.

蜜桃社区 4 Ukraine hosts meetups every Saturday for the Ukrainians. Their growing number of local friends have pitched in with everything from grocery store gift cards to furniture to handmade quilts. They have helped place the refugees in jobs, housing and schools. 

Russian Studies Professor Amanda Ewington and Motria Procyk, a Ukrainian American and administrator at The Pines, serve as 蜜桃社区 4 Ukraine leaders. Procyk鈥檚 husband, Greg Snyder, a religious studies professor at 蜜桃社区, is among the many college 蜜桃社区 members who help. (Procyk and Snyder, with 蜜桃社区 residents Aimee Symington and George Husk, are also Valeriia Kruzhkova鈥檚 local host families.)

The weekly gatherings offer a chance to socialize over coffee and doughnuts. The Ukrainian and Russian languages flow loud and freely. Young kids play joyfully outside. The grownups hug and laugh and talk, sometimes lapsing into concerned conversations about the war. 

鈥淪ome of these people have been traumatized. The winter has been especially tough when they hear about the bombings of power grids and their families living without heat or water in the freezing cold,鈥 Ewington said. 鈥淲e wanted this to be a social time for them to get a little break from their many worries, and not feel so isolated.鈥

鈥溍厶疑缜 4 Ukraine鈥 Event participants

A 蜜桃社区 4 Ukraine gathering in early December

Students Tutor Ukrainian Children

蜜桃社区 Tutors

Some families have young children now attending local schools.

Iryna Sizikova鈥檚 son, Ihor, started at 蜜桃社区 K-8 School in fall. Like his mother, he speaks Ukrainian, Russian and English. Other children spoke only Russian before arriving. 蜜桃社区 College students stepped in to make their transition easier.

Once a week, students in the college鈥檚 Russian Studies Program head to the school to tutor the Ukrainian children. At first the kids seemed shy, but as they got to know their tutors and learned English, they became far more outgoing.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e been so helpful to my son and the other children,鈥 Sizikova said. 鈥淓veryone here has done so much to make us feel welcome.鈥

Kate Spencer 鈥24, a Russian studies and political science double major, was studying for an exam last February when news broke that Russia had attacked Ukraine. She鈥檇 been following Russia鈥檚 encroachment closely. 

鈥淔or weeks the warnings had been coming,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was clearly going to happen but so hard to believe it actually did. It really hit close to home for people here with family and friends in the region.鈥

Robert Sparks 鈥23, a political science major, made many friends, including his host family, while studying abroad in Ukraine two years ago. He was floored when Russia invaded Ukraine and worries about his friends there. He now tutors Ukrainian children at 蜜桃社区 K-8.

鈥淲hen it first happened, we felt helpless and didn鈥檛 know what to do,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is something we could do.鈥

蜜桃社区 K-8 teachers say the tutors offer invaluable support.

鈥淭eachers love seeing our students interact with the 蜜桃社区 College students鈥攊t鈥檚 huge, we鈥檙e so lucky to be right down the street,鈥 said Matt Lineback, a multilingual learner teacher at 蜜桃社区 K-8. 鈥淭hese are really bright kids who鈥檝e been through a lot. When they鈥檙e with their tutors, they aren鈥檛 insecure about mispronouncing words, they just come to life, their eyes light up and their personalities shine through.鈥

Spencer loves the welcome she gets as a tutor.

鈥淚 hope they feel like we offer them a safe space where they feel comfortable,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 hope they feel fully understood and heard.鈥

When she first started tutoring, a teacher introduced her to one of the students. Spencer greeted the little girl in Russian.

鈥淪he got the biggest smile on her face,鈥 Spencer said, 鈥渨hen she realized I could talk to her.鈥

Valeriia Kruzhkova with her parents, Olena and Mykhailo

Valeriia Kruzhkova with her parents, Olena and Mykhailo

Under Attack

Valeriia Kruzhkova planned to spend a gap year working as a bank manager in Kyiv to earn money for college when the Russian bombs forced her out of the city.

She was horrified, terrified, angry and filled with grief, but grateful to get a spot on a packed bus that took her to her family in eastern Ukraine. Those feelings swirled through the next months. She鈥檇 been accepted to 蜜桃社区 but as the battles spread across Ukraine, feared she wouldn鈥檛 be able to get there.

Then she got an email from 蜜桃社区 telling her that another student鈥檚 parents had offered her their apartment in London.

Daniel Szlapak鈥檚 Jewish grandparents fled from Poland to Kenya when the Nazis trampled through Europe during World War II, slaughtering millions of Jews. His wife, Catherine, also grew up in Kenya, where they raised their daughter, Arella 鈥24, and son, Toby, a first-year student at Boston College.

They have a second home in London and when Russia attacked Ukraine, the Szlapaks felt compelled to help. They volunteered to host refugees and reached out to 蜜桃社区, offering their London apartment to any students from Ukraine who needed a safe place.

Kruzhkova contacted them and they assured her she鈥檇 be welcome. The Szlapaks set up a Zoom call for their two families.

鈥淲e knew how worried they must be, and it was important that they saw us as a family,鈥 Catherine Szlapak said. 鈥淰aleriia鈥檚 parents don鈥檛 speak English, so she translated. I think they felt better after that meeting.鈥

It took Kruzhkova months to obtain a travel visa and when she finally did, she took a 17-hour bus ride to Warsaw, Poland, then got on a plane for London.

鈥淚t was such a hard drive across Ukraine,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 saw so many houses destroyed by the Russians, it was so heartbreaking. I could not believe this was happening to my country.鈥

Her two-day journey ended at London Luton Airport, where Catherine Szlapak, who she鈥檇 only met on Zoom, greeted her with a big hug. 

Szlapak helped her open a bank account, navigate London鈥檚 Tube transportation system, and get a visa to travel to the United States. Kruzhkova connected with a Ukrainian social club close to the apartment and volunteered as a tutor to other refugees learning English. In summer, the Szlapak family joined her in London before everyone left for college

Catherine Szlapak and Valeriia Kruzhkova.

Catherine Szlapak and Valeriia Kruzhkova

鈥淪he became part of our family,鈥 Catherine Szlapak said. 鈥淪he鈥檚 one of us.鈥

 Their parting was poignant.

鈥淲e had quite an emotional goodbye,鈥 Catherine Szlapak said. 鈥淲e agreed to say, 鈥榮ee you later,鈥 not 鈥榞oodbye.鈥 Valeriia is very special. She鈥檚 so determined and brave and strong, and I know she鈥檒l make the most of everything life has to offer.鈥

Kruzhkova regards the Szlapaks with deep affection.

鈥淭hey have been so very kind to me,鈥 she said. 鈥淐atherine has been my second mom; I know she cares about me a lot. I don鈥檛 know how I鈥檒l ever be able to pay them back for everything they鈥檝e done."

Heartsick About Home

After a semester studying abroad, Arella Szlapak is back at 蜜桃社区, where she鈥檚 happy to see Kruzhkova settled. Though they have different and very busy schedules, they recently caught up over dinner.

Four people pose with arms around Valeriia, center

Valeriia Kruzhkova (center) with Daniel, Arella 鈥24, Toby and Catherine Szlapak at the Henley Royal Regatta in England

鈥淪he鈥檚 become like a sister,鈥 Arella said. 鈥淰aleriia is such a wonderful part of our family. Having someone who鈥檚 family here at 蜜桃社区 is so nice.鈥

Szlapak said she and her family worried about Kruzhkova being alone and so far away during her first year of college while contending with the traumatic events going on in Ukraine. 

鈥淚 hope she could feel the love we were sending her,鈥 Szlapak said. 鈥淗aving things so out of your control must be so hard. The fear and uncertainty of your family not being safe seems unbearable. Valeriia is probably the bravest, strongest person I鈥檝e ever known.鈥   

Kruzhkova spent Christmas in 蜜桃社区 and New Year鈥檚 in London, where she stayed at the home of the Szlapaks鈥 neighbors and celebrated with friends.

鈥淣ew Year鈥檚 has always been one of my favorite holidays because it鈥檚 always a chance for a new start and new possibilities,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 especially true this year.鈥

February, with Valentine鈥檚 Day and then her birthday two weeks later, used to be her favorite month. Now, it鈥檚 a reminder of the misery inflicted upon her country.

At home, people deal with power and heat outages, food shortages and the ever-present threat of danger. Her 14-year-old brother, Dima, still goes to school, which is often interrupted by the air raid sirens that force everyone to shelter in the basement.

鈥淚鈥檒l ask my mom how she is, and she always says, 鈥業鈥檓 okay,鈥欌 Kruzhkova said. 鈥淏ut I know she鈥檚 not okay. None of this is okay.鈥

Like many Ukrainians, she believes her country will prevail. 鈥淲e鈥檙e 100 percent sure we鈥檒l win this war but at what price?鈥 she asks. 鈥淚鈥檓 happy and so grateful to have people who have accepted me into their families and made me feel so welcome and safe. I just want my family in Ukraine to also be happy and safe.鈥

On Feb. 23, 2023, an awareness and fundraising evening was held on 蜜桃社区's campus to commemorate the one-year anniversary of Russia鈥檚 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and to celebrate Ukrainian resilience.


This article was also published in the Spring/Summer 2023 print issue of the 蜜桃社区 Journal Magazine; for more, please see the 蜜桃社区 Journal section of our website.