Official Pod Meets World Harley Shirt
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he interpreted as: “So, old man go away, otherwise your grandkids will not see their granddad, but a piece of meat.” Though Ukrainian authorities have urged many people still living near the Official Pod Meets World Harley Shirt and I love this front lines to leave, officials are sympathetic. “It’s really very hard for people to be here. They don’t want to leave the town where they were born. The example of Vera is a very obvious example. She was just a person who went out to buy some food and she was killed,” said Serhiy Chaus, 42, head of the Chasiv Yar Military Civilian Administration. Mykola Yaroslavstev, 75, prepares to leave the eastern Ukrainian town of Chasiv Yar for the relative safety of Odesa. Many elderly people cannot or refuse to leave eastern Ukraine despite an ongoing Russian offensive.Dean Taylor / NBC News Although his position is unelected, everyone here calls Chaus the mayor. He stepped into a power vacuum that emerged when the town’s mayor fled shortly before Moscow’s full-scale invasion a year ago. “It’s difficult to be a mayor of a town in peaceful times — when you have
war, it’s much harder. We try to provide the Official Pod Meets World Harley Shirt and I love this people with all they need, including water,” he said. Chaus explained that a big problem is the lack of medical supplies — he used the town’s last tourniquet recently. There are heroes fighting in the trenches, he added, but also here in what have now become frontier towns in Ukraine’s battle for survival. After an explosion shook the earth too hard for comfort, Chaus ushered everyone in the courtyard into a basement shelter — where a family, including a single mom and her two children, had been living since last June, only leaving rarely. NBC News learned later that the family has now finally left Chasiv Yar, moving to the far west of Ukraine near the borders with Hungary and Moldova. The makeshift shelter where the Anapolska family has lived for almost six months. Serhiy Chaus, right, the town’s unofficial mayor, has been supplying residents with food and medicine.Dean taylor / NBC News Liza, 8, said she finds it hard to sleep at night, preferring to sleep when it’s light. Her older brother, Andriy, 13, and their neighbor Sophia, 14, are bored of their monotonous life, spending hours playing on their phones or reading. Liza and Andriy’s mom, 39-year-old factory administrator Natalia Anpolska, shared a poem inspired by the family’s claustrophobic existence. “There is no war here… Just me and my getting used to living in the basement, caring for each other. What else do you need for happiness,” it reads. The wall features her art: one is a fiery ball, filling the page, engulfing everything, white heat at its center. “This is what’s happening in our country,” she said. “This is our burning country.” Richard Engel and Marc Smith reported from Chasiv Yar and Patrick Smith from London.
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