The Prague Post - Toys and tales helping Ukraine kids process war trauma

EUR -
AED 4.263637
AFN 73.716284
ALL 95.823823
AMD 438.097079
ANG 2.07752
AOA 1064.453466
ARS 1624.560434
AUD 1.629869
AWG 2.08944
AZN 1.968844
BAM 1.952209
BBD 2.339856
BDT 142.301923
BGN 1.912587
BHD 0.438283
BIF 3264.749412
BMD 1.1608
BND 1.477421
BOB 8.027545
BRL 5.994135
BSD 1.161793
BTN 106.667387
BWP 15.524978
BYN 3.412112
BYR 22751.675905
BZD 2.336513
CAD 1.576447
CDF 2524.739906
CHF 0.903283
CLF 0.02614
CLP 1032.171239
CNY 7.98285
CNH 7.985013
COP 4303.200905
CRC 548.605058
CUC 1.1608
CUP 30.761194
CVE 110.450636
CZK 24.397864
DJF 206.297563
DKK 7.471369
DOP 70.402822
DZD 152.683511
EGP 60.359669
ERN 17.411997
ETB 181.723182
FJD 2.554689
FKP 0.866558
GBP 0.8653
GEL 3.157468
GGP 0.866558
GHS 12.595323
GIP 0.866558
GMD 84.739025
GNF 10188.91877
GTQ 8.907845
GYD 243.062327
HKD 9.08186
HNL 30.842442
HRK 7.533476
HTG 152.334385
HUF 386.828432
IDR 19572.245277
ILS 3.572466
IMP 0.866558
INR 107.20491
IQD 1520.647726
IRR 1534229.08397
ISK 145.727263
JEP 0.866558
JMD 182.2847
JOD 0.823019
JPY 183.491068
KES 150.033415
KGS 101.512272
KHR 4660.611346
KMF 491.018239
KPW 1044.754019
KRW 1696.404109
KWD 0.356493
KYD 0.968153
KZT 566.111117
LAK 24870.135247
LBP 103949.621343
LKR 361.118858
LRD 212.716621
LSL 19.002947
LTL 3.427541
LVL 0.702156
LYD 7.386747
MAD 10.836063
MDL 19.993912
MGA 4840.535423
MKD 61.621101
MMK 2437.608322
MNT 4162.952603
MOP 9.361279
MRU 46.583077
MUR 53.338854
MVR 17.945728
MWK 2015.690353
MXN 20.427637
MYR 4.554959
MZN 74.17849
NAD 19.002101
NGN 1619.895372
NIO 42.624986
NOK 11.180412
NPR 170.657148
NZD 1.957902
OMR 0.446277
PAB 1.161818
PEN 3.985609
PGK 4.99666
PHP 68.474456
PKR 324.328373
PLN 4.265765
PYG 7563.793717
QAR 4.226424
RON 5.088953
RSD 117.40793
RUB 91.743628
RWF 1693.026495
SAR 4.356604
SBD 9.346366
SCR 15.592773
SDG 697.641013
SEK 10.659189
SGD 1.478621
SHP 0.8709
SLE 28.556685
SLL 24341.390465
SOS 663.399044
SRD 43.57523
STD 24026.212029
STN 24.455648
SVC 10.165302
SYP 128.33438
SZL 19.002507
THB 36.657917
TJS 11.117932
TMT 4.074407
TND 3.368058
TOP 2.794928
TRY 51.179733
TTD 7.882806
TWD 36.920375
TZS 3013.435698
UAH 50.973776
UGX 4304.193979
USD 1.1608
UYU 46.854219
UZS 14126.934114
VES 505.756516
VND 30453.582518
VUV 139.056526
WST 3.174212
XAF 654.76952
XAG 0.013139
XAU 0.000224
XCD 3.137119
XCG 2.093703
XDR 0.814922
XOF 653.530573
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.966917
ZAR 18.890624
ZMK 10448.591927
ZMW 22.538416
ZWL 373.777059
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.8000

    17.5

    +4.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.25

    +0.13%

  • BCC

    -1.9500

    72.54

    -2.69%

  • BCE

    0.5100

    26.39

    +1.93%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.64

    +0.47%

  • RIO

    1.3300

    91.68

    +1.45%

  • RELX

    -0.4900

    35.19

    -1.39%

  • NGG

    -0.5600

    89.85

    -0.62%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.08

    -0.35%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    14.46

    -0.14%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    55.32

    -0.34%

  • BTI

    1.0800

    59.41

    +1.82%

  • AZN

    0.0400

    194.99

    +0.02%

  • BP

    -0.7100

    39.94

    -1.78%

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.Cejka--TPP