Dubai Telegraph - Toys and tales helping Ukraine kids process war trauma

EUR -
AED 3.885561
AFN 71.400618
ALL 98.79328
AMD 414.292695
ANG 1.907403
AOA 963.698942
ARS 1066.336254
AUD 1.628103
AWG 1.904163
AZN 1.795023
BAM 1.966261
BBD 2.136919
BDT 126.474081
BGN 1.955959
BHD 0.398799
BIF 3063.586381
BMD 1.057868
BND 1.421328
BOB 7.313739
BRL 6.226927
BSD 1.058406
BTN 89.364294
BWP 14.45872
BYN 3.463545
BYR 20734.21722
BZD 2.133299
CAD 1.483819
CDF 3036.081522
CHF 0.93176
CLF 0.037478
CLP 1034.140602
CNY 7.665949
CNH 7.663785
COP 4650.653186
CRC 540.581189
CUC 1.057868
CUP 28.033508
CVE 110.853206
CZK 25.263985
DJF 188.00465
DKK 7.45924
DOP 63.800041
DZD 141.14823
EGP 52.544905
ERN 15.868023
ETB 133.775068
FJD 2.398346
FKP 0.834993
GBP 0.83437
GEL 2.887538
GGP 0.834993
GHS 16.457169
GIP 0.834993
GMD 75.108704
GNF 9120.611028
GTQ 8.165443
GYD 221.422813
HKD 8.230934
HNL 26.768417
HRK 7.546048
HTG 138.809829
HUF 412.972726
IDR 16784.401733
ILS 3.868598
IMP 0.834993
INR 89.313751
IQD 1386.489712
IRR 44523.025916
ISK 144.726771
JEP 0.834993
JMD 167.179453
JOD 0.750344
JPY 159.428672
KES 137.046879
KGS 91.83513
KHR 4258.596826
KMF 496.087495
KPW 952.081002
KRW 1471.664088
KWD 0.325178
KYD 0.88198
KZT 531.935107
LAK 23239.09082
LBP 94776.202446
LKR 307.98148
LRD 189.445228
LSL 19.202464
LTL 3.12361
LVL 0.639894
LYD 5.178552
MAD 10.604621
MDL 19.383854
MGA 4952.230549
MKD 61.534897
MMK 3435.914732
MNT 3594.636173
MOP 8.481706
MRU 42.073853
MUR 49.423082
MVR 16.343633
MWK 1835.220639
MXN 21.778455
MYR 4.699583
MZN 67.594496
NAD 19.202464
NGN 1787.828721
NIO 38.947213
NOK 11.691316
NPR 142.978315
NZD 1.791084
OMR 0.407285
PAB 1.058406
PEN 3.9903
PGK 4.267604
PHP 62.087871
PKR 294.091951
PLN 4.304395
PYG 8273.015308
QAR 3.857532
RON 4.978005
RSD 117.030899
RUB 119.70066
RWF 1458.338186
SAR 3.973993
SBD 8.876139
SCR 14.379774
SDG 636.299149
SEK 11.528351
SGD 1.416755
SHP 0.834993
SLE 24.015219
SLL 22182.972765
SOS 604.904004
SRD 37.438486
STD 21895.736441
SVC 9.261361
SYP 2657.925503
SZL 19.199329
THB 36.505443
TJS 11.350923
TMT 3.713117
TND 3.324903
TOP 2.477632
TRY 36.659157
TTD 7.184291
TWD 34.353179
TZS 2798.7078
UAH 44.065804
UGX 3905.687309
USD 1.057868
UYU 45.36026
UZS 13598.02485
VES 49.396389
VND 26853.984905
VUV 125.592242
WST 2.953135
XAF 659.456185
XAG 0.035212
XAU 0.000401
XCD 2.858941
XDR 0.809588
XOF 659.465585
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.38771
ZAR 19.209908
ZMK 9522.027644
ZMW 28.8669
ZWL 340.633137
  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    6.9

    +1.45%

  • SCS

    -0.0100

    13.53

    -0.07%

  • GSK

    0.2600

    34.28

    +0.76%

  • CMSC

    -0.0310

    24.539

    -0.13%

  • VOD

    0.1150

    8.975

    +1.28%

  • CMSD

    -0.0410

    24.389

    -0.17%

  • RELX

    0.2500

    47.06

    +0.53%

  • NGG

    0.5200

    63.35

    +0.82%

  • RIO

    0.2550

    62.285

    +0.41%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    37.94

    +0.61%

  • JRI

    0.1660

    13.406

    +1.24%

  • BP

    0.1700

    29.13

    +0.58%

  • BCE

    0.4500

    27.08

    +1.66%

  • AZN

    0.7600

    67.12

    +1.13%

  • BCC

    -2.4100

    146

    -1.65%

Toys and tales helping Ukraine kids process war trauma
Toys and tales helping Ukraine kids process war trauma / Photo: Genya SAVILOV - AFP

Toys and tales helping Ukraine kids process war trauma

In the cellar of a Kyiv kindergarten decorated with bunting and wall paintings of doughnuts and cats, dozens of children are taking shelter during an air raid.

Text size:

The staff try to reduce the psychological impact on children who can barely remember a time without sirens and fear.

"They go calmly, none of them cries," says one of the carers, Tetiana, 68.

The children chatter and giggle as they do colouring, listen to stories, build Lego and get their faces painted.

"We're hiding from bombs," one boy, Platon, tells AFP as he selects Lego pieces.

"When we expect bombs, we go to the cellar," a girl, Nadiya, adds matter-of-factly.

Concerns over the war's emotional toll on children have prompted diverse efforts to help -- from a book of therapeutic stories to specially commissioned videos from the makers of US show "Sesame Street".

The kindergarten director, Alla Pysmenchuk, said some of the children come from hotspots in eastern Ukraine that many families have fled.

"There are children whose father or mother, or close relatives, are now at war and defending our country," she said.

Iryna Kioresku, a psychologist, works with such children in a soft-surfaced sensory room.

"All the children understand that something's wrong, even if at home they don't talk about the war," she says.

"The topic of war is very hard for children. Whether you are talking about children who left their homes or stayed here, they are all anxious and have fears."

- Russian 'baddies' -

Ukrainian children's author Tania Stus has written a book of stories designed to help parents open up a conversation about the war with children aged 4 to 5.

"The most important thing is to explain to adults how to speak and explain to children... what is happening around them," says Stus.

The book, titled "Secret Stories of Small and Big Victories", was first released in audio format for free, to enable access for families fleeing Ukraine.

A psychologist supervised and checked "every word," Stus says.

She advises against lying to children about war, saying: "When a child asks, they must be told and given an explanation."

Her stories are "realistic, so as not to give children illusions that the war is some kind of fairy tale," she says.

Instead, she offers them "tools to cope".

In one story, a little girl says Ukraine is fighting "bad baddies".

A boy tells her the enemy are in fact Russians.

Stus says this wording was "an extremely difficult decision".

"The fact is that the people who have come to kill us -- including children and my relatives -- are residents of Russia," she says.

"No matter how much I'd like to call them abstract names from films or cartoons, this would be deceiving our children."

However, the book teaches children that troubles can be overcome, she says.

"Children should always be given hope."

- Sesame films -

Ukrainian children's trauma is also prompting an international response.

This week, Ukrainian television channel, PlusPlus, began airing videos designed for children in crisis and war, created by the US makers of "Sesame Street".

Right after the war broke out, Sesame Workshop set up "an immediate task force", says Estee Bardanashvili, the organisation's senior director and supervising producer for international social impact.

"We know from research that prolonged trauma affects children's development."

As well as dubbing existing content designed to support children through turmoil and displacement, the team commissioned short live-action films featuring Ukrainian children.

Shot in January, "they are really mini-documentaries," Bardanashvili says, with children talking about cooking a traditional dish, playing the "bandura" stringed instrument and embroidering "vyshyvanka" shirts.

The videos show "what the children really feel that they're proud of, what are some of the ways that they're coping with the crisis and with the war," Bardanashvili says.

There are no direct references to war, and Sesame Workshop seeks to help children with "coping tools and skills", she says.

"Trauma does have long-lasting effects on you," she says, stressing the importance of "moments of joy and moments of learning".

W.Zhang--DT