Volodymyr Nikulin, a 53-year-old police lieutenant colonel, provides a human perspective on the tragic reality faced by many Ukrainians. As the war intensifies in the eastern Donbas region, Nikulin's life has been marked by constant upheaval as he is forced to flee from city to city, grappling with the loss of his homes and community.
### The Struggles of a Ukrainian Police Officer Amidst War Displacement
### The Struggles of a Ukrainian Police Officer Amidst War Displacement
In the ongoing saga of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, stories of resilience emerge as individuals like Volodymyr Nikulin navigate the chaos.
The belongings of Volodymyr Nikulin, a Ukrainian police officer stationed near the country’s eastern front line, boil down to this: a shrapnel-riddled car, a small sack stuffed with sweaters and pants, and two plastic bags filled with basic food and medicine. Keeping it simple is essential for Mr. Nikulin, who has had to leave three cities to escape the advance of Russian forces in the country’s eastern Donbas region, losing his home each time. So he has learned to live with little and to be ready to pack up on short notice.
He has barely bothered to settle into the friend’s apartment he currently occupies in Sloviansk, a city 15 miles from the combat zone, leaving the bedroom untouched and sleeping instead in a small office. The distant rumble of Russian bombing regularly echoes through the walls, a reminder he may soon have to leave everything behind again. “Who knows where I’ll be in a few months?” Mr. Nikulin said on a recent morning in Sloviansk, acknowledging that Russian forces in the area were creeping closer. He joked that he could at least count on his damaged car, recalling how it had helped him escape several Russian attacks. “It’s my lucky car,” he said with a thin smile.
Mr. Nikulin’s story of fleeing city after city under assault — Donetsk in 2014, when Russian-backed separatists took control of the city, and then, after Russia’s full-scale invasion began, Mariupol in 2022 and Myrnohrad this summer — is emblematic of the plight of millions of Ukrainians displaced by the war. Like many, he has left beloved towns, watched his homes be destroyed or occupied, and mourned neighbors killed in the fighting. As a police officer evacuating besieged cities, he has also braved ordeals, including helping journalists escape Mariupol so they could reveal harrowing images of the Russian onslaught there.