Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian professor in Ukraine longs for peace

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2022 10:28 AM
  • Canadian professor in Ukraine longs for peace

VANCOUVER - The wail of an air-raid siren has become part of the soundtrack of Svitlana Matviyenko's life.

The first time she heard the blaring alarm indicating she was along the trajectory of a Russian rocket, Matviyenko panicked. Now, the assistant professor at Simon Fraser University's school of communication has something of a routine.

She calls her parents, who are in their 80s and live a block away from her in the western Ukraine city of Kamianets-Podilskyi, to let them know to go into a "safe room" — a windowless space that's easier for them to access than their basement — until she gives them the all-clear.

Then, she monitors various apps and messaging groups to check how long it's expected to last.

The sirens can go on for 15 minutes, or as long as two hours. One Saturday-night alarm lasted three hours. The sirens go off two or three times a day, but so far, the city has been spared any bombings.

"I'm very, very happy I'm here. I think I would have absolutely lost my mind if I were (in Canada)," Matviyenko said. "Here I feel like I at least control some situation."

A permanent resident of Canada, Matviyenko went to Ukraine a little over a year ago to care for her mother, who had a broken spine.

She has also been able to continue teaching a graduate seminar on the history of communication theory to students back home in Metro Vancouver, but only when the internet is accessible, she said.

Before Russia began its invasion of Ukraine late last month, she said she had a "bad habit" of leaving the television on while she slept. But the habit broke just after the first day of the invasion, she said.

"I only want silence," she said.

"My feelings changed several times during the first week of war. When I woke up and heard silence, I felt almost a warm wave running through my body, like absolute pleasure. Almost orgasmic feeling. I was surprised by such a visceral reaction to just the fact that I hear it's quiet."

Matviyenko said she keeps herself busy all day between teaching a class and writing a book.

It's "too strong" to say that she lives everyday as it may be her last but there is a "subtle feeling" that it might be a possibility, she said.

"I need to do it faster, or I need to finish it faster. Because something may happen now," she said. "The deadline has become a little too literal."

There is also a rushing yet quiet need to celebrate moments of life since the "strange sounds" of war first began in mid-February, she said.

For the first time in the roughly 20 years since Matviyenko left home, she said she celebrated her birthday on Friday with her parents. She turned 46.

Her mother insisted on making holubtsi, which is a traditional Ukrainian stuffed cabbage dish and a favourite, she said with a laugh.

"We were so excited about the holubtsi that we actually missed one air raid siren," Matviyenko said. "Didn't hear it at all. We were just laughing and celebrating in there. Luckily nothing happened and we were not hit."

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta budget set to rebound on high oil prices

Alberta budget set to rebound on high oil prices
 It's budget day in Alberta, and Premier Jason Kenney says there will be a massive infusion of money for the health-care system. Kenney says the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed a system that has too few hospital beds, labs and intensive care spaces.

Alberta budget set to rebound on high oil prices

Trudeau condemns Russia's attack on Ukraine

Trudeau condemns Russia's attack on Ukraine
Trudeau said he would be meeting Thursday with G7 partners and would work quickly with NATO and Canada's allies "to collectively respond to these reckless and dangerous acts, including by imposing significant sanctions in addition to those already announced."

Trudeau condemns Russia's attack on Ukraine

Ottawa approves made-in-Canada COVID vaccine

Ottawa approves made-in-Canada COVID vaccine
Health Canada says its effectiveness and safety in those under 18 and over 64 have "not yet been established." Clinical trials suggested the vaccine was 71 per cent effective in protecting against COVID-19 one week after the second dose. The dosing schedule is 21 days apart.

Ottawa approves made-in-Canada COVID vaccine

Joly calls Russian envoy on carpet over Ukraine

Joly calls Russian envoy on carpet over Ukraine
The meeting at the Lester B. Pearson Building in Ottawa took place as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was meeting virtually Thursday with G7 partners to discuss a response. Trudeau said before the meeting that Russia’s actions will be met with severe consequences.

Joly calls Russian envoy on carpet over Ukraine

799 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

799 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
There are 653 individuals hospitalized with COVID-19 in B.C., and 108 are in intensive care.

799 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

Emergencies Act no longer needed: Trudeau

Emergencies Act no longer needed: Trudeau
Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act, which replaced the War Measures Act in 1988, for the first time last week, saying police needed extra help to end protests against COVID-19 restrictions that had occupied downtown Ottawa for weeks and spread to key Canada-U.S. border crossings.

Emergencies Act no longer needed: Trudeau