
Ukrainian student at Dalhousie trying to live normal life with family in limbo
CBC
Alina Butova was exhausted. After months of preparation, the microbiology and immunology graduate student at Dalhousie University in Halifax had just presented her thesis project. She staggered home for some much-needed sleep.
It wasn't long before her husband woke her with terrible news. Russia had attacked Ukraine.
Butova, 23, reached for her phone and immediately started calling family members. Her mother was in Kyiv with her younger sister and brother.
"I said they have to move to the West," Butova said in an interview.
From thousands of kilometres away, Butova started booking train tickets to help them flee the capital.
More than six and a half million people in Ukraine have been displaced and almost four million forced to flee to neighbouring countries since the war started in February. The United Nations said this week more than 1,000 civilians have been killed.
"It was pretty hard to work for the first weeks," Butova said. "I couldn't eat or sleep."
Like many Ukrainians, Butova's mother, sister and brother eventually landed in Poland. Her father remains in the war-torn country. She said he stayed back in Brovary, a Kyiv suburb, to fight as part of the "territorial defence."
That decision has been hard for her family, Butova said. She said her younger brother called her crying and asked her to convince their father to change his mind.
"I felt really helpless because my small brother was scared and I couldn't do anything," she said.
As the war rages on, and west Ukraine is no longer safe, Butova is focusing on her work at Dalhousie University as much as she can.
"I'm trying to live a normal life if that's possible for now," she said.
It's challenging. There's a level of uncertainty that hangs over her.
Instead of booking train tickets for her family to leave Ukraine, Butova planned on scheduling a flight for herself to go home this summer. She's not optimistic that will happen even if Ukraine somehow won the war tomorrow.