In just three weeks since the February 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, over 1.5 million Ukrainian children have fled the country, seeking refuge from the unthinkable and often traveling alone to neighboring countries. Another six million minors remain in Ukraine, many trapped with their families in Eastern and Southern Ukraine, spending the last days of the winter in outdated bomb shelters and cold basements. Grassroots initiatives across the country are employing arts and crafts in a desperate attempt to mend some of the incalculable tolls on the mental and physical health of the youngest Ukrainians. The Ukrainian media Ukrainska Pravda gathers drawings of the war as seen through the eyes of Ukrainian children.

Seen through a child’s eyes, the horror of war is heartwrenching
Since the war started, some Ukrainian mothers have given birth in basements and bomb shelters; the first sounds that these newborns hear are loud, sometimes deafening explosions. Air raid sirens wail on and off, sending families hurriedly to the nearest bomb shelter. As children wait for the end of the air alarm, many of them draw images of Ukraine - the way their country is today, and the way they imagine it could be soon. What would you expect a child to draw? Animals, sunshine pretty flowers, stick figures of a happy family, perhaps some trees and a bright blue sky?





All forms of art therapy can heal war-related trauma
Evidence has it that children are helped in overcoming their experiences and some of the trauma of war through activities such as drawing, dancing, singing, and various other forms of art therapy. [embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WJNt9bz3uk[/embedyt] Artistic activities could also prevent long-standing issues from developing from wartime trauma. Art therapy has long been recommended by psychologists to evacuate stress and deep-seated emotions. This can help children of war to build constructive platforms and develop the confidence and life skills they will need later on in life. Any form of art is an expressive form of psychotherapy, a version of art-making that helps to improve the children’s social, mental, and emotional functioning. Art therapy increases the feelings of well-being and is considered a healing process through non-verbal communication, exploration of emotions, and self-discovery. Art also functions as a source of spirituality that provides aesthetic pleasure and inner peace. Thus, children who are unable to speak about the events, whether good or bad, are given the opportunity to do so through any art form they choose.
Related:
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- From retiree to millionaire: 7 stories of heroism during the war in Ukraine
- Moscow issues slide show for Russian schools to teach pupils to hate Ukraine
“What Russia’s doing to us isn’t war, it’s extermination”: how I escaped my Russian-occupied village

Solomiya Bohdanova (10 yrs), Kyiv. Love Ukraine! L-the bad guy. We will win! Photo: Ukrainska Pravda




