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PHOTOGRAPHS BY OLENA BILOUS
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By David Beard, Executive Editor, Newsletters
Among the hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians fleeing Russian soldiers, bombs, and missiles, Olena Bilous has an “edge,” if you could call it that.
The Ukrainian photographer had to flee her home from Russian invasion once before.
On Friday, after explosions in Kyiv, she set off west in a caravan of seven cars. By Sunday she was safe, for now, near the western border. “I have no clothes, little money,” she told Nat Geo’s Whitney Johnson. “I grabbed only a camera and a bag with documents. I’m starting a new life from zero. There is me, a tracksuit on me, a camera, and my fiancé.” (Pictured above, the bag.)
Her wedding to her fiancé had been set for March 11. Not only is that in flux; he can’t follow her if she crosses the border, because men from 18 to 60 are required to right the Russian invaders. The couple is together, for the moment.
Bilous’s life reflects the nation’s struggle. She was uprooted from her home in Donetsk when Russia invaded the eastern region in 2014. A year later, at a Nat Geo Photo Camp for displaced people, she met Johnson. Bilous said then that displacement transformed her, and she sought for her images “to go straight to the heart.” The latest invasion has rocked her and her family.
“I don’t want to be a refugee,” she tells us. “I want to live in Ukraine. I love Ukraine.”
Here are a few of her photographs below, and here’s our collection of images from Ukraine under attack.
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