tv [untitled] November 3, 2022 1:30am-2:01am EET
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they started not only to disassemble and repair like this. how do you find these objects? then people submit applications or do you just come to the villages and see that there are no windows. at first it was like that. we did scouting. objects simply drove into some village or city and drove and simply looked for objects, then they began to appear with administrations, and now it happens like objects that we ourselves found just walking down the street quite often, we go through objects to someone approaches us and asks us to help them, and objects come to us from completely different ways. and the money for this is all international aid . yes, international aid and many donations. at first, it was only for nato, people, now there are also funds . but i saw. maybe i'm wrong, but the biggest object that you restored is the school in gostomel,
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right? yes, it has already been restored, is the process underway? now we are restoring the kindergarten in the lakes, and there are still a lot of big projects, but i can't talk about them yet tell they just now are in agreement. that is, it is still in the process. yes, it is in the process . i saw an interview with you on one of the shows, and you said that you couldn't hide your tears on that video. it seems that it happened somewhere near kyiv , and it was some the story really touched you, so the video shows that you have a lot of touching stories. well, in the same bucha, or basically in every city, there is a story that is very insightful. there were stories in kherson. i also started volunteering first in kherson i started volunteering there on february 26, and i was there
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very, very strong stories of people who came to us at the volunteer center and brought the last thing they had. there is one story about a grandmother. it was february 26, 6, and i was volunteering at the district executive committee in kherson, and it was such a point when everyone endured that who could not understand what should be carried, and one grandmother came, she could barely walk, and brought uhm, 20 hryvnias and a piece of frozen lard there, about half a kilogram, now i'm a little teary because well, as she says, it's for boys and then they were going outside the city on the antoniv bridge and we tried to sell them some food, it was a difficult time, well, it is difficult to win over such a people. when an old grandmother who barely goes out
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just brings her last hryvnia, you have seen many cities, many villages, even now, when you are restoring them, you have heard the stories of people, you have seen them with your own eyes well, how do you manage to somehow react? well, don't say it calmly, yes, but if you pass every story through yourself like that, it will be very difficult. it blocks a lot of things. well, there are many people who have experienced very terrible things in their lives, and you you talk to them all the time while volunteering, hmm. they are so used to what happened to them that their psyche can't stand to react emotionally to it every time . and when you come and talk to these people, sometimes they need this kind of communication with people who are even up for it they don't respond. and i had a case. when i was sitting, we were treated to lunch at one of the objects. woman. well, we are eating
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some pasta. and she tells us what she had in the yard. there was a checkpoint with some buryats. a and she flips through his photo feed and then tells and says this is my dog there is a dead dog and this is my husband, the dead husband is lying with her in the yard and this is my brother and there is simply no choice half a head and while i am eating and we are talking and after 30 seconds after that we are already joking because if you don't block like that, you can just go with your mind. but these are terrible things you tell me, and i know that you also experienced terrible things, especially when this happened, especially when you tried to break out of kherson, how did you manage to do that, and what did you have to leave there? had to leave my business er my home was a recreation center on the
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arabatskaya arrow, and many things, this city is my home - it is a home to experience, the departure itself was not so much, well, it is scary. when i left every checkpoint - it is scary russian because when you pass by, you understand that you can do anything you want, but for me the scariest thing happened in kherson when we were volunteering, then after the executive committee, when russian troops entered the city, it closed, i went to volunteer at our favorite burger joint, and the boys and i the girls were volunteers there and i heard one of them , uh, 30 fbshniks fell on us and arranged not very nice things there, i still ca n't fully tell what happened there, but i survived. well, i thought i was going to die and i was
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very- very, very close to that well, as is the typical work of facebook workers there, or all of them on the floor, so they beat me there a little and some other things were done to me, although there were just volunteers there, and there were, i don’t know, packages. yes, we were just volunteers from the food point we collected and delivered the food food to those who needed it, but there was also such a thing as the neighboring room. it was the office of the right sector that burned down six years ago, and that's why it was n't very fun for me. well, should i be surprised when people fight over the old cheeks about the office of the right sector later they broke into the house where another one of our volunteers lived. they came from old odesa . there was also an office from the right sector there, but the cafe has been there for 10 years . when you talk to them, it's
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like you're talking to a person you communicate in your language, but you seem to have completely different values. a completely different life and no understanding. they seem to live in a different world and do not understand what is going on and what happened, they asked me. how do you feel about the fact that uh i told them what i honestly think. well, there was such a moment, it was for one interrogation, er, they take you away before you are interrogated. well, the interrogation. yes, i was at three interrogations, er, at one of the interrogations. i chatted with the facebook user for an hour when he picked up the walkie-talkie and said, "i'm not writing you down." you can tell me everything you don't think, what i think. well, let's at least tell the insults, of course , because well, i wanted to survive, and they were based there in
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the sbu building, there you come, they put a cap on your head and you go, er, once under the handle and you understand that there were a lot of them there, and it was, but after i jumped out, all i thought about them was uh, a very strange moment when i got out , my passports were returned to me at that very moment, uh, they were taken away when there was a raid on us, they were passports and i would say that all i think about them, i came out and was very happy, this is a very strange story, the russian troops issued me ukrainian passports and listened to everything i think about them, it was strange, a strange thing happened, but then it was even better, we were one of the first people chosen by facebook users in the city, and that's why they are still, somehow, more more loyal well, they beat me and did terrible things, but then worse stories started happening to people, they tried to, uh, somehow, very much according to the crimean scenario, somehow, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, cooperation,
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to involve us in collaboration, but, well, this did not happen. by the way, you say that they old addresses went, which means that the work is bad, the collaborators are working, so there were not many of them there. and if there were many, who gave them at all? well, it turned out in kherson , i think there will be more of them. to me because i didn't, well, i didn't even expect that my place was so cool. when such a number of people came out on people on machines with automatic machines, well, machines with automatic machines , people with flags came out, and this is a very historic event. kherson rallies are very important for the whole countries. i only realized later how important it was, and this is one of the indicators and the number of people who went to rallies. it
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would have been march 13, which was probably the largest rally, and by that time a lot of people had already left. from the city and at the same time well, a very large number came out, despite the fact that many people did not come out because they were afraid and it would have been to be afraid of it, in fact, there were very few coberrants in kherson. i think it increases the number of homeless people in kherson than what happened in fact, i am very, very happy about it, well, that is, there is generative of russian propaganda footage when people come out in kherson who were waiting for russian peace - that's all uh, at first it was only uh, people imported from somewhere uh, they were brought on buses uh, there is some layer of the population who care exactly there, which is ready to be sold for dry rations, well, this is this, this is that, i can’t
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say that it’s not true. - that is, such an overwhelming majority of collaborators well, there are almost no collaborators, the full number of kherson residents is a very small percentage. and there were meetings, so you often went to them because we only saw the first ones here, then there was already a full occupation and communication, well, look rallies at first, the rally of the first one, it seems like the first one, they entered the city in march, and for three days, the whole city sat in their houses, nobody went out , nothing worked, then somehow people started to go out and live somehow there were two very big money markets er and there were daily rallies but they were not so big. i thought that it should be
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done there once a week so that as many people as possible came out. a very large rally was held on march 13, because march 13 coincided with the day of the liberation of kherson from of the nazi invaders, there were rumors that they wanted to do this day as a referendum. and this also encouraged people to go out on the streets, and it was a very big number of myths. then there were smaller rallies, they continued until almost all those who went left to rallies where god and the repression didn't start, by the way, i stopped going to wash after the first day. they just told me that you can't go to the meetings because we will, quote, start the repression. i was shocked when i heard the word repression in my life.
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doing repression is fine, man, well, i just have three hours, it’s just a human mode, well, we’re going to start the repression. well, i’ve got something in my head. they are at the rally they just killed, i don't know, they didn't kill, they gassed people, shot people, uh, i didn't hear about the murder, not at the rallies, but well, tough, they stood in different ways, they shot from a machine gun, it was the first time when they started shooting, it so happened that i was walking right next to it seems like some kind of armored personnel carrier or something similar, i was walking through it at that very moment, it was the first beterskyi began to shoot his air but i didn't understand that the air was, well, it was a little scary, i'll tell you, yes and you now have a connection with someone from kherson has been in touch with this lately
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it's much worse because the home internet has been fixed, now the internet works only through russian sims, it works very poorly, but some people who stayed in the city can be contacted through messengers, once a day someone posts something on instagram, i repeat, tells us not to disturb that there is more or less in the city everything is normal, there are always some events that are not very good in kherson and regarding the recent referendums yes, so-called, is there any information from people who are there, or did they really go to vote who is there of course this is very funny well of course no one ever went maybe those who got russian passports went there 50 people
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probably nationalists maybe more for example, i probably voted. they collected my passports, i probably voted for joining russia because, well, my passport was there, although i’m not sure, and we don’t need passports there . well, they already have a scheme that has been worked out for 20 years. why is there now? people are resettled by the russians, they want, they want to cover themselves with the people who are leaving, they cover themselves when transporting their equipment with them, they want to use their equipment constantly, well, that’s what i think, it seems to me, i’m an expert in this, but there is a feeling that they will simply then aim at all the homes of people who have moved. and is there any information from kherson where these people are being resettled? hmm, where do they live in a dormitory? it’s not very good. i know that there are a lot of them on the arabatskaya arrow, almost everything arabic
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the arrow was occupied by the russian troops, and people are being relocated to the other bank of the dnieper, residents of kherson, about them. thank you for the evacuation. to be honest, i know that many people have gone. who went where ? i don't know . no one is currently evacuating and has not left, so i can say so that i can be sure of this. well, just judging by the actions of the russians, it gives the impression that they are preparing a second stalingrad in kherson, well, in general, something very strange is happening and it hurts me because i don't understand what's going to happen, i don't have any very happy thoughts about it because well, they're definitely not vacating the city , they're not going to give it up just like that, and just be happy because it's like they're leaving the city, well, it's too early , it's too early that's not what you said from the business, e.e., the recreation center, what about it, you know, russians live there, russians
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live there beautifully. well, you know, it might sound like that, but it's good that it's at least whole. what about them ? but they won't be there either, but it will all happen later a-a-a what was the most terrible thing in the occupation when you were in kherson from the members of freedom we from the members of freedom it is a very strange river when you can't say anything you can't do anything you don't affect anything at the legal level when you feel this not freedom when you, well, the rally - it was a project of freedom, and that's when i felt it, like many people of kherson. at that moment, it was, well, we were strong. at
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that moment, when they started to suppress it, well, it hit me very, very hard. it was the greatest feeling. on svobody when you understand that you need to clean you can't talk on the phone, well, that is, when i left the city, i could still say orcs er-er to them for about a week or a half, but i said mountains because well, so that it would n't be heard er-er because it wasn't very er-er and that's it these things are terrible when you realize that you just came armed people who can kill you for a new word e.g. kill beat take you somewhere in the basement they can do anything to you they have no rules and this is very scary it is not important to live with those who now it stays in the city and make it function, so i'm in a lot of pain
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for these people i eat i eat them er to some extent i am very proud they are the people who remained and at the same time they love the country or are they waiting for the armed forces er they have very, very much strength to continue being in the city a philosophical question yes i have always wondered why our people here, but in kherson, in particular, they go out on armored personnel carriers , machine guns, a crowd of thousands in an occupied city, and in russia, people are simply afraid to go out into peaceful squares and protest against something, they are afraid of riot police batons and sit there for a while in a pre-trial detention center, well, in them there is no they don't have courage, they are sure that they won't change anything and this well, i don't understand because when the military came to my city, i was still able to
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do that, i started volunteering, i took the flag, went to a rally, er, showed who was in the city er- who is this place, the city, and we all showed ourselves like that, we went, approached them, talked with them, told them that why did you come here, this is our city, we don't need you here, you are not liberating anyone, this is our city, but the people in russia, well, there is no such thing, it seems to me, but people have not been there for 100 years the freedoms, at least later with you, will fully know what not to fight for. i know that you are going through terrible moments thanks to the fact that you write poems, so sometimes sometimes it happens that it helps. there are already many poems during the war . yes, now a little less, before there were periods when i wrote a lot, as soon as i left kherson for odesa, i just sat on deribasivska street and
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wrote poems one by one, now more well, i have many volunteering projects and sometimes so many but sometimes there is a moment of catch yes, i am writing, this is a good thing, such sublimation is correct. when volunteers come to us, we offer to turn to the audience, i don’t know, to the authorities, and maybe there is a need now in your organization for something, you want something, i don’t know, ask for help. is there a project, hmm we need to attract people, money, we always have a lot of projects. if you can join us, you can find district number one on your website. on the internet, you can donate on your smartphone. voluntary travel is a very cool thing, and besides
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the fact that you help people on these trips, you really help, uh, often it is about psychological help , that is, cleaning a house is economically a little cheaper than using equipment, but at the same time, when we clean a house, the house of a person is really alive and she sees that 30-40, 50, 100 people who, for free, without payment, come to help, and faith in people appears, and i am sure that all these people, whom we helped in cleaning their house, will remember them for the rest of their lives. remember how it was the moment when 50 ukrainians and not only ukrainians came, 50 people who came and helped simply because they didn't leave a person in trouble and this is very important and also psychological help and i get so high from you every time and i
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recommend it to you it can be once a week, it can be once a month, but you can always join our team, we will always be happy for you to experience good emotions at least this way and help really help the boys from the region. one already has his bags packed to go rebuild kherson, of course, i will go to the city as soon as the first armored personnel carrier is released . kherson will definitely go to the humanitarian mission and they will do something there. i have many volunteers from kherson who are there. volunteers from kherson have left and are now helping. there are a lot of volunteers of various kinds and
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we will get together as one big team and go do things already in our hometown serhii and we discussed about poems, maybe there are some four lines about the hometown in general well, i want to read it, i'm sorry, but i can't. as i said at the beginning , the volunteers are quite shy people, we thank you very much, thank you for your work, for not leaving people who are currently in trouble, and we hope and wish that your organization will go south very soon, we are going to work, restore and rest, because there is a rest base there she is waiting, i hope that everything will be alright with her and we want to thank once again all the ukrainian volunteers who sacrifice their peaceful lives to help others, someone transfers hryvnia for hryvnia to the army, collects funds for the purchase of cars and military ammunition, someone weaves nets,
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makes trench candles, welds small pots, others carry all this at the front, giving our soldiers a powerful sense of a reliable rear, the same support is needed by those from whom the aggressor country took away their native home, all the benefits of civilization, we together with our as defenders, we don’t get tired of telling them thank you, we entered the subway from it and we’re done, so if uh , the collection uh is again
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of this, we end this information hour, the marathon, the only news, continues, we’ll meet later, tell me honestly how are you how, honestly, it’s not the best a period in my life at the beginning of the war i became very anxious and i don't trust people i checked 10 times and closed the door i often wake up in the middle of the night crying every day tears just help and you don't have to be afraid of it next time try also cross your palms with your
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thumbs hooked so that they resemble a butterfly, put your palms to your chest and alternately rhythmically tap your collarbones due to internal vibration, you will hear sounds like a loud heartbeat, this will calm you down, continue this exercise until you feel that your breathing has evened out, pipe this technique into your self-help bird more here everything starts with the team fire with fire they destroy the enemy with fire they pave the way for our brothers with fire they bring our victory closer cossack harpoons to the present our gunners are the true gods of war. congratulations on the day of missile forces and artillery of ukraine. the government
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of ukraine, in partnership with the un foundation in the field of the population, is expanding the work of centers to help survivors in settlements that will receive war victims. social workers, psychologists and lawyers will provide free and confidential consultations in the centers. to receive psychological and legal support, to learn about the humanitarian assistance of the settlement and social benefits, also experts will tell you how to get medical assistance and, if necessary, provide contacts of the necessary specialists, find out about the work and addresses of the centers on the 24-hour government hotline 15:47 and on the national hotline for the prevention of domestic violence , human trafficking and gender discrimination by phone 116-123 rules of a warm country healthy care in the house cool but not cold thank
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you you dress your deer to warm one is easier than to heat a whole apartment let's beat the winter together love gives birth brave hearts brave hearts endure a long time brave hearts are merciful not jealous they don't brag, they don't get puffed up, they don't behave politely, they don't seek only their own, they don't get angry , they don't think evil, but you rejoice in the truth, bear everything, believe everything, hope everything, endure everything
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