For Traumatized Ukrainian Refugees, A Semblance For Home / Le Monde / 2022
Irina Radelytska, a psychologist working with Premiere Urgence Internationale, inside a refugee shelter in Radymno, Poland, on July 22, 2022.
More than five million people have entered Poland since Russia invaded Ukraine. Some require specialized follow-up treatment after the violence they've experienced. Others simply struggled finding a place to stay and ended up in refugee centers scattered across Poland.
Viktoria, 33, (L) and Svetlana, 50, Ukrainian refugees from Kupiansk, Kharkiv region, inside a refugee shelter in Radymno, Poland, on July 22, 2022.
Hallway inside a refugee shelter in Radymno, Poland, on July 22, 2022. Located inside former agricultural school dormitory, it hosts some 250 refugees from Ukraine, with a total capacity of 600.
Roma refugees from Ukraine outside Kapelanka refugee center in Kraków, Poland, on 15 July, 2022.
Ukrainian refugees queue outside information center in Przemyśl, Poland. on 27 May, 2022.
Map of Ukraine with hearts marking home of each resident of Kapelanka refugee center in Kraków, Poland, on 15 July, 2022.
Mother and daughter inside Kapelanka refugee center in Kraków, Poland, on 15 July, 2022.
Sasha's mother spends entire summer days playing video games as his mother works to support them. Kapelanka refugee center in Kraków, Poland, on 15 July, 2022.