The Prague Post - Ukrainian haiku poet finds small miracles in war

EUR -
AED 4.198869
AFN 75.459174
ALL 93.82806
AMD 417.721269
ANG 2.04685
AOA 1049.573924
ARS 1686.960353
AUD 1.639402
AWG 2.057988
AZN 1.94314
BAM 1.956291
BBD 2.302178
BDT 140.894125
BGN 1.963673
BHD 0.431023
BIF 3399.872153
BMD 1.143327
BND 1.475828
BOB 7.916205
BRL 5.847427
BSD 1.143037
BTN 109.994933
BWP 15.56445
BYN 3.30736
BYR 22409.207647
BZD 2.298667
CAD 1.603453
CDF 2583.918432
CHF 0.922682
CLF 0.026865
CLP 1057.325588
CNY 7.744039
CNH 7.751002
COP 3707.786338
CRC 518.750599
CUC 1.143327
CUP 30.298163
CVE 110.297503
CZK 24.205947
DJF 203.53909
DKK 7.47542
DOP 66.989741
DZD 152.184791
EGP 57.794717
ERN 17.149904
ETB 184.478482
FJD 2.563625
FKP 0.847936
GBP 0.850973
GEL 3.00121
GGP 0.847936
GHS 13.189195
GIP 0.847936
GMD 84.605963
GNF 10024.515677
GTQ 8.72057
GYD 239.129422
HKD 8.963969
HNL 30.611021
HRK 7.535441
HTG 149.393371
HUF 363.571672
IDR 20513.571612
ILS 3.484232
IMP 0.847936
INR 110.049847
IQD 1497.341243
IRR 1572074.516319
ISK 143.396016
JEP 0.847936
JMD 181.055436
JOD 0.810617
JPY 185.639129
KES 147.729627
KGS 99.984186
KHR 4621.179906
KMF 490.487226
KPW 1028.994306
KRW 1698.309871
KWD 0.353368
KYD 0.952493
KZT 540.214468
LAK 25790.246555
LBP 102351.290108
LKR 384.09303
LRD 206.88368
LSL 18.862959
LTL 3.375947
LVL 0.691588
LYD 7.29715
MAD 10.663876
MDL 20.099835
MGA 4864.454753
MKD 61.658832
MMK 2400.296845
MNT 4102.40769
MOP 9.230257
MRU 45.560426
MUR 53.907692
MVR 17.675918
MWK 1981.97539
MXN 19.992562
MYR 4.681946
MZN 73.06976
NAD 18.862959
NGN 1577.585346
NIO 42.062947
NOK 11.039536
NPR 175.993632
NZD 1.960863
OMR 0.439604
PAB 1.142977
PEN 3.877293
PGK 5.108282
PHP 70.443782
PKR 317.797773
PLN 4.34626
PYG 6928.041587
QAR 4.178031
RON 5.241035
RSD 117.35109
RUB 89.600391
RWF 1683.118071
SAR 4.300126
SBD 9.228205
SCR 15.349496
SDG 686.57024
SEK 11.040759
SGD 1.476309
SHP 0.853609
SLE 27.86857
SLL 23975.002264
SOS 653.195343
SRD 43.001643
STD 23664.558892
STN 24.507222
SVC 10.00051
SYP 126.374323
SZL 18.848389
THB 38.463232
TJS 10.561366
TMT 4.013077
TND 3.374947
TOP 2.752857
TRY 53.924734
TTD 7.761914
TWD 36.998399
TZS 3009.475382
UAH 51.054412
UGX 4223.244525
USD 1.143327
UYU 45.941529
UZS 13727.444937
VES 828.728852
VND 30063.781382
VUV 136.48411
WST 3.13156
XAF 656.124525
XAG 0.020703
XAU 0.000287
XCD 3.089898
XCG 2.060007
XDR 0.814843
XOF 656.121655
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.865877
ZAR 18.87619
ZMK 10291.314859
ZMW 20.830045
ZWL 368.150802
  • BCC

    -0.4100

    79.73

    -0.51%

  • NGG

    1.8400

    84.35

    +2.18%

  • AZN

    -0.1000

    169.19

    -0.06%

  • BCE

    -0.0550

    22.085

    -0.25%

  • RELX

    -0.1850

    33.835

    -0.55%

  • RIO

    -0.8450

    89.825

    -0.94%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    67.35

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    22.04

    -0.27%

  • GSK

    -0.9600

    51.81

    -1.85%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    18.25

    -0.38%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    22.29

    -0.09%

  • VOD

    0.2650

    15.885

    +1.67%

  • BTI

    -0.1400

    63.02

    -0.22%

  • BP

    0.6650

    41.745

    +1.59%

Ukrainian haiku poet finds small miracles in war
Ukrainian haiku poet finds small miracles in war / Photo: Tetiana DZHAFAROVA - AFP

Ukrainian haiku poet finds small miracles in war

A temperamental lift leads to the apartment in central Ukraine of a 27-year-old poet celebrated in Japan but almost unknown in her own country.

Text size:

With pink hair, fuchsia sweater and matching socks, Vladislava Simonova tells the story of her burgeoning career 7,800 kilometres (4,850 miles) away in a country she has never visited.

But here in the central Ukrainian city of Poltava, she lives near a trolleybus depot, which is just one of the sites targeted by Russian drones whose constant buzzing puts her on edge.

Just as she mentions the word "explosion" to describe the terror of Russian strikes, a drone whizzes overhead and explodes in the distance.

Next to her, a shelf holds 15 books with colourful spines -- a collection of contemporary Ukrainian poets -- two Japanese teapots, three religious icons and a figurine of Phoebe Buffay from the series "Friends".

"I never thought that I would be writing about war," she told AFP.

"With time, I somehow came to realise that ... tiny details can convey the tragedy of this great war much better than perhaps dozens of reports," she added.

Simonova is among a whole generation of artists bearing witness to the invasion that has devastated Ukrainian cultural life.

Simonova said she discovered haiku -- her preferred form -- in 2013, when she was a teenager.

The three-line poems, made up of 17 syllables in a 5-7-5 pattern, were codified in 17th-century Japan to capture the beauty of nature, daily life and fleeting moments with simplicity.

For years, she studied the Japanese masters -- Basho, Buson, Issa -- and wrote more than 600 haiku which, she said, gradually became less "clumsy":

He walks so proudly,

On soft apricot petals

This plump little cat.

24.04.2015

Not bothered by rain,

I tremble my way back home

With a pine sapling.

16.10.2014

- 'Communion' -

In 2018, Simonova won a competition organised by a Japanese foundation.

When Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022, she was living in Kharkiv.

Russian forces tried to seize the northeastern city and have been shelling it constantly since being pushed back.

For three months when Russian troops first crossed the border, she survived by living in an underground shelter.

Instead of a storm --

The rumbling of explosions.

Springtime has arrived.

14.05.2022

A house in ruins.

Through the hole in the rooftop,

Stars are glimmering.

14.05.2022

In March 2022, from her shelter, Simonova gave a written interview to Japan's The Asahi Shimbun newspaper.

A few weeks later, renowned poet Madoka Mayuzumi got in touch.

She told AFP that Simonova has a "deep understanding" of the essence of haiku.

"Even in the midst of war, she gazes up at the moon and stars and admires flowers... her haiku reflect a communion with nature," Mayuzumi said.

"Despite the themes that tend to be sombre, her work possesses a sense of optimism," Mayuzumi added.

Bees oblivious

To the air-raid siren's sound.

Linden trees in bloom.

19.06.2022

With around 10 others, Mayuzumi helped Simonova translate and publish her first collection in Japan in 2023.

The book received "very high praise", Mayuzumi said.

Throughout Japan's history, she added, people have written haiku in dark times, including after the 1945 atomic bombings and the 2011 tsunami.

- 'Cherry blossoms' -

In August 2022, the underground shelter in Kharkiv where Simonova had lived was destroyed by a Russian missile. She moved to Poltava.

She published a second collection in Japan in 2024, followed by another in Denmark in early 2026.

She dreams of publishing one in Ukraine.

Before the war, she wrote in Russian. She later switched to Ukrainian.

The translation of the poems was complex. The two related languages often use words of different lengths -- "umbrella", for example, is one syllable in Russian, but four in Ukrainian.

Simonova does not read prose, "only poetry". And the Bible. She belongs to Poltava's tiny Catholic community.

During AFP's visit, she suggests going to the park, says goodbye to her husband -- who stays at home -- before hurrying down the stairs of her Soviet-era apartment block. The lift was not working.

It is a cold spring Sunday and the park is almost empty. She sits on a tree branch near a pond, wearing a multicoloured puffer jacket.

Since childhood, Simonova has suffered from a serious heart condition that leaves her exhausted.

She discovered haiku in a hospital, in an anthology that also contained "Persian poems".

As the wind blows, she stands up and reads aloud for the first time in public, reciting each poem twice.

The first is for friends no longer around:

They scatter away

Like cherry blossoms in wind,

People I hold close.

The second is a memory of Kharkiv.

I clutch in my palm

Some fragments of a missile.

The pain stays with me.

She leafs through her pink-covered collection, then chooses one last poem.

What a sky it is!

And yet from that very sky

Missiles fall on us.

R.Rous--TPP