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During Ukraine’s rolling blackouts, candles and ‘faith in ourselves’ become latest weapons

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The Current19:38Ukrainians face winter with disruptions to power and heat

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Amid rolling blackouts across Ukraine,┬аDr. Roman Moraru-Burleku is determined to keep performing the surgeries that his patients need, even as Russian attacks disrupt the hospital’s electricity.

“We can do, and we must do all of our operations every day тАж we do it now no matter what,” said Moraru-Burleku, a doctor of oncology and transplantology in Cherkasy, a city in central Ukraine.

“If we stop our battle tomorrow, we don’t have our country.”

Russia has targeted Ukraine’s electrical grid in recent weeks, resulting in intermittent blackouts across the country. People have been left without power for days at a time,┬аplunging the population into the dark and cold of winter.

Lviv city centre without electricity on Nov. 15, after critical civil infrastructure was hit by a Russian missile attack. (Vladyslav Musiienko/Reuters)

At the Cherkasy hospital this week, the lights went out right as two patients were being wheeled into the operating theater, about to receive kidney transplants.┬а

“We have two patients and two organs outside the human body,” Moraru-Burleku said.

“This is a very risky situation. But we can’t stop, and we didn’t stop.”

Generators kicked in and the operations were completed successfully. Both patients are set to return home on Monday, with new kidneys and no further need for dialysis treatment.┬а

But Moraru-Burleku estimates they have only two weeks of fuel left to run those generators, and is unsure what will happen after that.┬а

For him, the hardest part of the blackouts is not being able to stay in touch with his wife and children.

“We can’t connect, we don’t have Internet. I don’t know where they are, what are they doing, if they’re even safe or not when we have Russian attacks,” he said.

WATCH |┬аSurgeons perform heart surgery during blackout in Kyiv

Surgeons perform heart surgery during blackout in Kyiv

Doctors at the Kyiv Heart Institute were performing heart surgery on a teenage patient Wednesday when the power went out, so they continued operating by the light of their phones and headlamps.

Support for disabled Ukrainians

The blackouts are also posing serious challenges for people with disabilities,┬аsaid Yuliia Sachuk, head of Fight for Right, an organization supporting Ukrainians with disabilities.

Like the doctor and his family, a lack of power means disabled Ukrainians can’t contact loved ones or support networks to ask for help if they need it. There’s also no way to charge or run assistive technologies, like screen readers for blind people, which┬аoffer news and information in an accessible format.

“For people with physical disabilities, it’s not possible to use elevators. It’s not possible to recharge the batteries if you use, for example, electric wheelchairs,” Sachuk said.

Her organization has launched a project to help disabled people during winter, connecting them with volunteers who can drop off food and other necessities. They are also setting up accessible centres where people can shelter, or access generators to charge assistive technology.

It’s exhausting, 24/7 work, she said.

“It’s not easy, but тАж we are confident in our victory and we are doing what we can do in our own front line, helping those with disabilities in Ukraine.”

People shop for shoes by phonelight in Kyiv on Nov. 26. (Gleb Garanich/Reuters)

Kids deserve Christmas: author

At this stage of the war, Ukraine’s “weapons are power banks, candles, generators┬атАж and actually, the faith in ourselves,” says┬аIuliia Mendel, author of The Fight of Our Lives, and former spokesperson for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

People are starting to think about the upcoming holiday season, with some wondering if it’s even right to celebrate Christmas this year, she said.

“For many people, this is a big thing: are we going to celebrate? Is that actually appropriate to celebrate?” said Mendel.

“But then we see the soldiers who say, ‘Our kids, they┬аdeserve to have the Christmas tree.'”

She said the holiday season might not have big public gatherings or even enough power for public Christmas lights, but at the same time “people want to celebrate life.”

“This is very important when there is this death threat, when there are so many things which showed threat to our very existence,” she said.

“We appreciate every moment of normal life because тАж we do not know if the future is going to be for every person who stays alive right now.”

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