From doctors to cocktail bar staff, the people of the Ukrainian capital speak of their everyday acts of resistance and determination to much more than simply survive

At Kyiv’s Beatnik Bar last spring, the mixologists wrestled with the question of whether they should even try reopening. Their families were mostly under Russian occupation in eastern Ukraine, many of their friends were on the frontline. Was it really the right time to be worrying about making and selling high-end cocktails?

But they had emptied their bank accounts while volunteering, needed money to live and to support the war effort, and figured the government could do with the taxes.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Richard Jenkins: ‘If a serial killer is your son, do you stop loving him?’

The Six Feet Under actor on ​challenging roles, working with Guillermo del…

Jeremy Hunt faces red wall revolt if he delivers ‘a budget for the rich’

The chancellor’s potential inheritance tax cut in Wednesday’s budget would aid millionaires…