Ukrainian Young Teens

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General view of a gym where internally displaced persons have been placed in Lviv amid Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Mykola Tys / SOPA Images/Sipa USA/ipa via AP Images




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Ukrainian teens are using TikTok to give the world a glimpse at their lives in a war zone . Some of the videos are light, some heartbreaking, but each offer a painfully honest look inside the horrific circumstances that the people of Ukraine are experiencing every day.
Matilda Boseley, a journalist for Guardian Australia, posted a series of videos that teens and young adults have shared from Ukraine. “Not to be soppy but it’s genuinely so emotional to watch young people in Ukraine still finding ways to be funny and silly as their city is destroyed by shelling,” she wrote. “My feed is filled with videos like these.”
There are TikToks like this one below, which offers a look inside bomb shelter life and some glimpses of a war-torn city.
Not to be soppy but it’s genuinely so emotional to watch young people in Ukraine still finding ways to be funny and silly as their city is destroyed by shelling. My feed is filled with videos like these. pic.twitter.com/a0oiKcXecu
— Matilda Boseley (@MatildaBoseley) March 5, 2022
Another TikTok shows a teen saying goodbye to her father, who is staying in the Ukraine while she crosses the border into Romania.
This video isn’t a funny take but has been viewed 15 million times on the app – a larger platform than most news channels. I just find it interesting how much of the way history remembers this war will be through the lens of young people and especially young women on TikTok. pic.twitter.com/5XKgMrzAQb
— Matilda Boseley (@MatildaBoseley) March 5, 2022
Ukrainian travel blogger Alina Volik shared a look inside her new day-to-day life, which includes carrying an emergency backpack, keeping all windows sealed, and falling asleep dressed in street clothes in case an alarm sounds in the middle of the night.
More from Alina Volik, a small Ukrainian travel blogger who has been posting regularly about how the country has changed in the last week. pic.twitter.com/YRtTuUTg2C
— Matilda Boseley (@MatildaBoseley) March 5, 2022
One young woman, under the username @Valerisssh , shared a tour of her bomb shelter. Another showed herself and some other girls crossing the border in the middle of the night.
— Matilda Boseley (@MatildaBoseley) March 6, 2022
The Toronto Star reached out to Valeria Shashenok (@Valerisssh) to learn more about recording her experiences during Putin’s invasion. “Near my house, buildings are all destroyed,” she explained in an interview . “One of the reasons I go outside (even if it’s unsafe) was because I wanted to show people from another country.”
She added: “Yesterday I went to the supermarket to find water, but I can’t find water…In the future I want to go away from my country to another country. I need money for the future to survive.”
Shashenok is encouraging people around the world to donate funds directly in support of the Ukrainian Army. “We are a very strong country,” she concluded. “We protect our country from one of the biggest countries in the world.”
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General view of a gym where internally displaced persons have been placed in Lviv amid Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Mykola Tys / SOPA Images/Sipa USA/ipa via AP Images




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Tags




Russia



teens



Tik Tok



Ukraine






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More stories to check out before you go
Ukrainian teens are using TikTok to give the world a glimpse at their lives in a war zone . Some of the videos are light, some heartbreaking, but each offer a painfully honest look inside the horrific circumstances that the people of Ukraine are experiencing every day.
Matilda Boseley, a journalist for Guardian Australia, posted a series of videos that teens and young adults have shared from Ukraine. “Not to be soppy but it’s genuinely so emotional to watch young people in Ukraine still finding ways to be funny and silly as their city is destroyed by shelling,” she wrote. “My feed is filled with videos like these.”
There are TikToks like this one below, which offers a look inside bomb shelter life and some glimpses of a war-torn city.
Not to be soppy but it’s genuinely so emotional to watch young people in Ukraine still finding ways to be funny and silly as their city is destroyed by shelling. My feed is filled with videos like these. pic.twitter.com/a0oiKcXecu
— Matilda Boseley (@MatildaBoseley) March 5, 2022
Another TikTok shows a teen saying goodbye to her father, who is staying in the Ukraine while she crosses the border into Romania.
This video isn’t a funny take but has been viewed 15 million times on the app – a larger platform than most news channels. I just find it interesting how much of the way history remembers this war will be through the lens of young people and especially young women on TikTok. pic.twitter.com/5XKgMrzAQb
— Matilda Boseley (@MatildaBoseley) March 5, 2022
Ukrainian travel blogger Alina Volik shared a look inside her new day-to-day life, which includes carrying an emergency backpack, keeping all windows sealed, and falling asleep dressed in street clothes in case an alarm sounds in the middle of the night.
More from Alina Volik, a small Ukrainian travel blogger who has been posting regularly about how the country has changed in the last week. pic.twitter.com/YRtTuUTg2C
— Matilda Boseley (@MatildaBoseley) March 5, 2022
One young woman, under the username @Valerisssh , shared a tour of her bomb shelter. Another showed herself and some other girls crossing the border in the middle of the night.
— Matilda Boseley (@MatildaBoseley) March 6, 2022
The Toronto Star reached out to Valeria Shashenok (@Valerisssh) to learn more about recording her experiences during Putin’s invasion. “Near my house, buildings are all destroyed,” she explained in an interview . “One of the reasons I go outside (even if it’s unsafe) was because I wanted to show people from another country.”
She added: “Yesterday I went to the supermarket to find water, but I can’t find water…In the future I want to go away from my country to another country. I need money for the future to survive.”
Shashenok is encouraging people around the world to donate funds directly in support of the Ukrainian Army. “We are a very strong country,” she concluded. “We protect our country from one of the biggest countries in the world.”
The stories you care about, delivered daily.
SheKnows is a part of Penske Media Corporation. © 2022 SheMedia, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

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February 24, 2022 / 11:26 AM
/ CBS News

Yesterday, a 15-year-old girl named Daniele, who lives in Ukraine's capital, told CBS News of her hopes and dreams for the future. This morning, she woke up to a war. 
"At 5am today I had woken up bc [because] of some explosion sound, but I thought that was fireworks and went to sleep," Daniele said in a message. "At 7am I again woke up and the first thing I saw was my friends from another cities texted me that they also heard those sounds, everyone was frightened." 
Daniele lives in Kyiv, which was among the Ukrainian cities hit by Russia's overnight attack , which Ukrainian leaders called a "full-scale invasion" and Vladimir Putin referred to as a "special military operation." CBS News teams are also in the city, and like Daniele, have reported hearing loud explosions. A Ukrainian government spokesperson said "cruise and ballistic missile strikes" targeted the city's military control centers. 
"I just woke up, all of my friends frightened and don't know what to do," Daniele told CBS News over Twitter on Thursday morning. She said all school, including online lessons, had been canceled and that she and her parents have plans to leave the city. 
Soon after, Daniele tweeted that something had exploded near her, but that she wasn't sure where. 
"Oh my god it's not only near me, something's going in Kyiv rn [right now]," she said, and then soon after, "Now it's [quiet]." 
She is feeling OK at the moment, she said, but is scared for her friends who are in the Kharkiv region, an area in northeast Ukraine that was also hard hit by Russia's military overnight, along with the major cities of Odessa and Mariupol.
"My friend texted like hour ago that there were a lot of Ukrainian tanks and military in Kharkov region," she told CBS News around 10:30 a.m. ET on Thursday, using the Russian name for Kharkiv. "[They] haven't texted again since." 
She and her family are getting ready to leave their home, she said. They are planning to go to the countryside, where they believe it might be safer.
Just a day earlier, CBS News spoke with Daniele about the situation in Ukraine. She had expressed hope that a full-scale war would not happen. It was something she and her friends often talked about, but that they tried not to dwell on. They much preferred listening to music, watching movies and enjoying each other's company. 
They also had hopes for a school dance, but Daniele said making plans for such an event had to be put on the back burner, "because we don't know what will happen." 
"I'm just worried that war will start because there's so many people who die and it's horrible," she told CBS News less than 12 hours before Russia's attack began. "I just want there to be peace." 
Daniele has hopes of one day becoming a lawyer so she can help people, she said.
"I'm just a kid, and I don't want to worry about those things. I just want to go to college. I want my dreams to come true. And there's so many people who also want this." 
"If war starts," she said, "it will be terrifying." 
Li Cohen is a social media producer and trending reporter for CBS News, focusing on social justice issues.

First published on February 24, 2022 / 11:26 AM


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