As the Russians bombard the key Ukraine stronghold of Zaporizhzhia – this school offers hope underground

As the Russians bombard the key Ukraine stronghold of Zaporizhzhia – this school offers hope underground
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As the Russians bombard the key Ukraine stronghold of Zaporizhzhia – this school offers hope underground
Author: Askold Krushelnycky
Published: Feb, 06 2025 12:26

Askold Krushelnycky witnesses Russian ballistic missile strikes on the southeastern city and speaks to residents who remain unbowed and determined never to surrender to Putin. At first glance it is a wasteland, a barren plot of earth in a city caught up in some of the most vicious fighting between Russia and Ukraine. As missiles, drones and glide bombs terrorise the residents of Zaporizhzhia near the eastern front, it does not seem possible that any semblance of normal life can carry on.

 [Rescue workers at the site of Russian strike on a residential neighbourhood in Zaporizhzhia]
Image Credit: The Independent [Rescue workers at the site of Russian strike on a residential neighbourhood in Zaporizhzhia]

But, seven metres underground, the ground has been hollowed out to create a fully fledged school for 1,000 pupils. With only discrete entrances and a ventilation unit above ground, students rotate through the reinforced bunker daily. The school, which has been open little more than a week, lies in one of the few parts of the south eastern region of Zaporizhzhia that has not been occupied by the Kremlin’s forces since the first days of Russian leader Vladimir Putin’s full-blown invasion in February 2022.

 [Zaporizhzhia region governor Ivan Fedorov in the underground school]
Image Credit: The Independent [Zaporizhzhia region governor Ivan Fedorov in the underground school]

As part of the original onslaught, the Russians seized Europe’s largest nuclear power plant and Putin exploits the facility, packed with Russian soldiers and tanks, as nuclear blackmail - his terrifying Sword of Damocles hovering over the continent. As 2025 began, the Zaporizhzhia region faced a brutal uptick in Moscow’s attacks. The eponymous capital witnessed Russian ballistic missile strikes on the city and saw how its inhabitants remain unbowed and determined never to surrender.

 [People clear the rubble inside St. Andrew's Cathedral which was damaged by a Russian strike on Zaporizhzhia]
Image Credit: The Independent [People clear the rubble inside St. Andrew's Cathedral which was damaged by a Russian strike on Zaporizhzhia]

Shops and businesses remain open along its bustling avenues and Zaporizhzhia is a crucial industrial hub, particularly in the production of steel, aluminium, and other metals. As night falls in the short winter days, lights sparkle along the seven miles of the city’s main Sobornyi Prospekt, one of Europe’s longest streets. But the peaceful scene is illusory. On just one night over the past month, Moscow launched 400 air and ground attacks against Ukrainian military positions and population centres in the region according to its governor, Ivan Fedorov.

Aerial attacks against the city, targeting mostly civilian sites, produce regular tragedies. One Russian “glide bomb” attack on January 8 killed 13 civilians and injured some 30. At the new school - designed to withstand conventional and nuclear attacks - headteacher Valentyna Yerashova says it is taking its pupils and name from an existing school, the Zaporizhzhia Sich Collegium, judged too vulnerable to Russian attacks.

“Only schools with air raid-shelters have the right to operate,” she tells The Independent. “I want to believe that the war will end soon but, for now, this is the future of schools in Ukraine.”. Yerashova says her pupils can resume lessons in a “real” environment, and importantly, will once more be able to mingle and socialise with other young people. Half the pupils, aged six to 18, will be taught in morning lessons and the other 500 in the afternoon. In the event of an attack, 1,500 people can gather safely at the building which still smells of fresh paint.

“Even after this phase of the war ends, Russia will always be there and there can always be a threat. And here you can always use this space wisely - for school, for the playground, for everything. “We are somewhat optimistic, we want to believe that it will definitely come in handy. We have to believe, have hope. “Despite the terror the Russians try to inflict on Zaporizhzhia, we are gathering strength here, strength is in our land and strength is now education.”.

With increased attacks on the city, Russian forces are edging westward towards Zaporizhzhia as they try to bypass Pokrovsk in neighbouring Donetsk region, which Ukraine’s military command says has, for months, seen the heaviest fighting along the 600 miles of frontlines. Moscow has been desperate to capture it for more than a year. But they have faced fierce Ukrainian resistance and lost thousands of troops weekly. Now they may be trying to envelop Pokrovsk rather than attack head-on and some battles rage only 20 miles from Zaporizhzhia.

Having captured Enerhodar nuclear power plant 50 miles south west of the city, the possibility the Russians would precipitate a catastrophe that generated radioactive pollution or even a meltdown, terrifies Ukrainians still haunted by the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident in their country, the world’s largest civilian nuclear disaster. Member of the Ukrainian parliament for Zaporizhzhia, Oleksandr Vasiuk, said: “If the plant is damaged due to shelling or military actions, there could be a radioactive leak, leading to massive contamination in Ukraine and neighboring countries.

“The Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant is located on the Dnipro River, a crucial water resource for Ukraine and several neighboring states. Radiation contamination of this river could affect not only Ukraine but also Russia, Belarus, Moldova, and other European countries.”. The Russians forced Ukrainian scientists and engineers to keep operating the plant. Moscow eventually allowed the UN and the International Atomic Energy Authority to inspect the plant and its six reactors have been closed down.

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