This past week in Kiev has been nothing less than shockingly
extraordinary.
The protests that started in November escalated & turned
- sadly - deadly ugly.
The city waffled
on the brink of a state of emergency - Metro shut down, checkpoints installed
on many major arteries, school closed & several Embassies started
evacuating families.
Bunkering Down
We could hear the stun grenades from our house – but being
~5 km away from the fighting it was a surreal contrast to the seeming normal
operations in our neighborhood.
Tuesday afternoon things started to go south (~25 killed),
we got word that school would be closed & prepared to bunker down
We attempted home schooling on Wednesday – the kids making
their sequence of work.
I’ll admit - it was brutal.
Once again, I’m reminded how much we all should thank teachers.
When supplies looked dire, (only a few pots away from being
driven to instant), I headed out to reload the essentials
I’ve never seen the store so chaotic – clearly the whole
city was stock piling
Rest assured, we were back in business
Liquidate
With our upcoming move, we had already posted our car for
sale. When a buyer surfaced this week,
we were motivated to shed assets to increase our ‘run & don’t look back’
flexibility
I was across town getting the car inspected during what
turned out to be the bloodiest day so far (~50 more dead).
Not realizing just how bad it had gotten, we attempted to finish
the deal. Showed up at a bank to check
the bills (to verify the stack of USD was real), and were told the bank was
closed…..ALL the banks in the city were closed.
With rumors that gas stations and internet would be next down, we
scurried back home.
Along the way, saw how locals respond to bank closures…
On Friday it was slightly more calm – so we headed out to try again. A funny process of confusing
bureaucracy including a government office car inspection and loads of paperwork
Eventually we completed the deal!
Later that day, we bid farewell to 2 of our favorite furry
friends.
Originally ‘Salt-Snow’ and ‘Pepper-Yang’ – mostly called
non-PC ‘Whitey’ and ‘Blacky’
The sadness of not being able to take them with us softened
a bit by knowing they are going to a good home with dear friends (the Bellis) we
now have 2 more excuses to visit.
Celebrate?
As we delivered the cats, Paolo had just come back from the
protests & reported a jubilant environment. The opposition and the current government
had come to a compromise agreement including an early election and reducing the
President’s dictatorship like power. Many in the main square were celebrating and
crying tears of happiness.
That said, we know there is a long way to go, that words
don’t always lead to actions – and remain cautiously optimistic
Flee!
With the kids’ term break next week, we had planned a
road-trip vacation to Slovakia….seeing how unstable things have been, we were
more than happy to get out.
That said, with reports of random checkpoints and closed
border crossings, the road trip part was less attractive. We booked last minute tickets and flew out
instead.
While our shoe-string vacation has turned into a bigger line
item on the budget, the makeshift check point entering the airport (presumably opposition
looking to harass fleeing politicians or oligarchs), reinforced the decision to
make a quick break from it.
A crazy, stressful week – but when compared to that of the
~100 Ukrainians who have lost their lives in the battle for democracy &
freedom – a walk in the park.
Here’s to perspective & hoping the seemingly positive
steps toward peaceful resolution continue.
All we are saying, is give peace a chance!
Slava Ukraine!
No comments:
Post a Comment