Europe | Dancer in the dark

As Ukrainian men head off to fight, women take up their jobs

Mining is one big example

A woman sorts coal along a conveyor belt at a state-run coal mine in Donbas region, Ukraine
Image: Finbarr O’Reilly/ New York Times/Redux/Eyevine
|TERNIVKA

OKSANA SAYS she has placed her life on hold. Covid-19 took her mother and her husband two years ago. Russian artillery took her father and her oldest son this spring. “I’ve immersed myself in my work,” she says, 480 metres under the outskirts of Ternivka, a town in eastern Ukraine. The whites of her eyes glow in the surrounding darkness. Back in Bakhmut, the site of one of the war’s most vicious battles, Oksana, aged 49, was a dance teacher at a boarding school for impoverished children. Today, with her former house and hometown destroyed, her school closed, and her closest relatives dead, she is a coal miner.

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Dancer in the dark”

From the November 18th 2023 edition

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