8th September 2024

That is one in an occasional sequence of dispatches about life amid the battle in Ukraine.

KYIV, Ukraine — Simply steps away from rush-hour site visitors on Kyiv’s busy Taras Shevchenko boulevard, a handful of retirees pruned bushes in a quiet, inexperienced oasis.

“They began coming when the battle broke out,” mentioned Natalia Belemets, the curator of this small botanical backyard. “They wished to assist.”

The A.V. Fomin Botanical Backyard is one in every of Ukraine’s oldest. It has stood within the heart of the capital, Kyiv, for practically two centuries.

Members of the backyard’s employees have been inspired to go away Kyiv or work remotely when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. However quickly afterward, the necessity arose for seasonal work and backyard upkeep, so volunteers organized on social media and got here to assist.

“This botanical backyard is a pearl of Kyiv, a inexperienced jewel within the metropolis heart,” Ms. Belemets mentioned on a latest morning. It is very important hold it lovely, she added, “not just for us, however for the town and the nation.”

The volunteers do easy backyard work, like digging, accumulating branches and watering. At one level, there have been about 20 folks volunteering on a weekly foundation. As of late, the numbers have dwindled as a result of many individuals have returned to full time jobs.

Nonetheless, new faces are at all times coming. As Ms. Belemets spoke, two girls arrived and have been led over to a bush by a longtime volunteer. They bought proper right down to work, one of many girls pulling on the branches of a low bush, a brown leather-based purse slung over her shoulder.

Credit score…Laura Boushnak for The New York Instances
Credit score…Laura Boushnak for The New York Instances

Svetlana Sitko, 62, has been volunteering within the backyard since April 2022, when the horrors unleashed by Russian troops within the suburbs of Kyiv, together with Bucha, of their failed try to seize the capital have been solely simply changing into clear.

“After Bucha, after Kyiv, we needed to do one thing,” Ms. Sitko sighed. She pointed to her chest: “It begins within the coronary heart. We wished to do one thing within the metropolis, for folks, to assist.”

Her arms, clad in blue gardening gloves, gestured animatedly as she spoke concerning the orchard she and her husband have planted at their cottage exterior Kyiv: pears, apple timber, blackberries, blueberries, currants and honeysuckle.

A retired baby psychologist, Ms. Sitko mentioned that when she left the backyard, she would change out of her purple leggings and dirt-stained sneakers and head to a different wartime volunteer job: making camouflage nets for snipers.

Her husband, Yuri, was tending flowers close by. He’s the true gardening fanatic, she went on. Married for 36 years, they have been born 4 years aside on Feb. 24. That’s the identical date that Russia launched its full-scale invasion final 12 months.

Final Might, she mentioned, a soldier got here to the backyard along with his spouse and a small baby in his arms. He advised her that he had just a few hours free and that he wished to see “one thing lovely” along with his household.

“I positively consider that these guys who’re on the entrance want this very a lot,” she mentioned. “They’ll come again after the battle.”

Discovering magnificence within the backyard, she added, is “necessary for the soul — and the eyes.”

Daria Mitiuk contributed reporting.

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