Berliner Boersenzeitung - Puppets and poetry go underground in besieged city of Kharkiv

EUR -
AED 4.091379
AFN 76.878316
ALL 99.345038
AMD 431.682023
ANG 2.008766
AOA 1038.7176
ARS 1075.199929
AUD 1.629252
AWG 2.007819
AZN 1.891163
BAM 1.961626
BBD 2.250514
BDT 133.195569
BGN 1.960211
BHD 0.419794
BIF 3231.325505
BMD 1.113908
BND 1.439388
BOB 7.718924
BRL 6.168153
BSD 1.11461
BTN 93.113267
BWP 14.675584
BYN 3.647131
BYR 21832.599164
BZD 2.246703
CAD 1.505085
CDF 3196.916385
CHF 0.944415
CLF 0.037253
CLP 1027.925388
CNY 7.835005
CNH 7.835536
COP 4635.807121
CRC 578.016613
CUC 1.113908
CUP 29.518565
CVE 110.593444
CZK 25.147579
DJF 198.482131
DKK 7.457147
DOP 66.968886
DZD 147.505244
EGP 54.264029
ERN 16.708622
ETB 132.879831
FJD 2.44553
FKP 0.848307
GBP 0.832936
GEL 3.024332
GGP 0.848307
GHS 17.53307
GIP 0.848307
GMD 76.860144
GNF 9629.685002
GTQ 8.621682
GYD 233.192543
HKD 8.673607
HNL 27.672182
HRK 7.573474
HTG 146.89758
HUF 394.713426
IDR 16877.713062
ILS 4.20013
IMP 0.848307
INR 93.163989
IQD 1460.149508
IRR 46887.179208
ISK 151.670175
JEP 0.848307
JMD 175.120077
JOD 0.789201
JPY 160.713571
KES 143.415294
KGS 93.846436
KHR 4528.48951
KMF 491.624095
KPW 1002.516677
KRW 1486.850126
KWD 0.33992
KYD 0.928867
KZT 535.936453
LAK 24612.093798
LBP 99813.328877
LKR 339.541429
LRD 222.924048
LSL 19.387076
LTL 3.289081
LVL 0.673792
LYD 5.29279
MAD 10.799673
MDL 19.433715
MGA 5062.033392
MKD 61.511091
MMK 3617.930125
MNT 3785.059744
MOP 8.938927
MRU 44.139086
MUR 51.094975
MVR 17.109286
MWK 1932.739914
MXN 21.600516
MYR 4.62662
MZN 71.122863
NAD 19.387251
NGN 1800.130852
NIO 41.022197
NOK 11.619158
NPR 148.979444
NZD 1.776001
OMR 0.428798
PAB 1.11461
PEN 4.189743
PGK 4.427148
PHP 62.60942
PKR 309.750206
PLN 4.265692
PYG 8675.88275
QAR 4.061562
RON 4.974488
RSD 117.062802
RUB 103.927599
RWF 1504.066827
SAR 4.178943
SBD 9.244687
SCR 14.910613
SDG 669.981066
SEK 11.297217
SGD 1.435555
SHP 0.848307
SLE 25.449796
SLL 23358.090608
SOS 636.991759
SRD 33.902352
STD 23055.649126
SVC 9.753052
SYP 2798.727499
SZL 19.378551
THB 36.608612
TJS 11.848394
TMT 3.898678
TND 3.38054
TOP 2.608885
TRY 38.035657
TTD 7.578575
TWD 35.652303
TZS 3042.083016
UAH 46.151562
UGX 4123.245348
USD 1.113908
UYU 46.388182
UZS 14189.139368
VEF 4035190.685537
VES 40.955189
VND 27410.494079
VUV 132.24541
WST 3.116117
XAF 657.910885
XAG 0.036031
XAU 0.000424
XCD 3.010393
XDR 0.824549
XOF 657.919771
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.839029
ZAR 19.266974
ZMK 10026.513293
ZMW 29.565202
ZWL 358.67796
  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    25.07

    -0.32%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    13.01

    +0.69%

  • RBGPF

    62.3600

    62.36

    +100%

  • RIO

    1.0100

    64.58

    +1.56%

  • NGG

    0.9300

    70.48

    +1.32%

  • BCC

    4.1500

    141.65

    +2.93%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    40.86

    +0.15%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    35.1

    +0.17%

  • CMSD

    -0.0150

    25.005

    -0.06%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    37.9

    +1.21%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.08

    +0.28%

  • RELX

    0.8700

    48.86

    +1.78%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.3

    -0.15%

  • AZN

    -1.2400

    77.14

    -1.61%

  • BP

    0.2200

    32.86

    +0.67%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    10.11

    +0.99%

Puppets and poetry go underground in besieged city of Kharkiv
Puppets and poetry go underground in besieged city of Kharkiv / Photo: SERGEY BOBOK - AFP

Puppets and poetry go underground in besieged city of Kharkiv

In a subterranean metro station serving as a bomb shelter in eastern Ukraine, two flamboyant puppeteers act out a tabletop fairytale for a gaggle of spellbound children.

Text size:

With a cast of caricature dolls including a mustachioed king and a herd of pigs, Oleksandra Shlykova and Anton Andriushchenko tell the story of how "Princesses are different", entrancing the kids and their parents.

They are also distracting them from the near constant bombardments raining down on the city of Kharkiv above them, as Russia escalates its offensive in eastern Ukraine.

Using a mobile phone sound system the pair elicit giggles and gasps from their audience perched on steps lined with cardboard -- an auditorium improvised to prevent the cold and damp seeping into their bones.

"A live performance is always an emotion that is here and now," said 47 year-old Shlykova after concluding the show with a flourished bow and inviting the children to play with the puppets.

"We exchange emotions and it lifts our spirits. It's hard to describe it, you have to feel it."

- Underground hideout -

Deep underground, the metro stations of Kharkiv are now home to residents of the eastern metropolis fearful of the battle raging above.

Since pulling back from its northern offensive to capture the capital of Kyiv, the Kremlin has scaled up attacks on Ukraine's eastern flank, including Kharkiv just 21 kilometres (13 miles) from the Russian border.

On Friday, shelling of residential areas of the city killed 10 people. On Saturday, a strike claimed two more lives.

The walkways of the metro stations are now lined with bedding and mounds of belongings. The stationary carriages have been divided into makeshift homes.

Toiletries line the train windows and inhabitants pry open the sliding doors to access their spaces. The main walkway smells of the soup being ladled out to those living here.

"When you watch this performance you remember the stories and you alter the way you see the world," said 37 year-old Oksana, who brought her two daughters to the show.

They are living in a underground shelter nearby, and came over to this one to escape the grim tale unfolding above.

"Truth and humour gives you a boost and makes you happy," said Oksana, who declined to give a surname.

- Poetic escapism -

Across town a poetry performance takes place in a white brickwork bunker down some narrow stairs past a ramshackle workshop.

The shelter is also packed with improvised beds.

Serhiy Zhadan reads out verse overlaid with melodica music in a purple neon-lit soundproofed chamber.

A small crowd follows the reading, in which Zhadan holds forth a surreal lyrical monologue detailing an assortment of animals.

Zhadan describes the poem as a "brutal lullaby" based on a satire of a children's book.

It's laced with profanity, a far cry from the family-friendly staging in the metro underground. Nevertheless its objectives are similar.

"A person cannot live only with war," said Zhadan -- a literary celebrity in poetry-obsessed Ukraine.

"It is very important for them to hear a word, to be able to sing along, to be able to express a certain emotion."

(K.Müller--BBZ)