Prøve GULL - Gratis
The Russians took their children...These mums went and got them back
Marie Claire Australia
|July 2023
Making a nerve-wracking 5000km journey from Ukraine into Russian-occupied territory and back again, a group of mothers managed to recover their children from the custody of Russian authorities
For weeks after Russian troops forcibly removed Natalya Zhornyk’s teenage son from his school last year, she had no idea where he was or what had happened to him.
Then came a phone call.
“Mum, come and get me,” said her son, Artem, 15. He had remembered his mother’s phone number and borrowed the school director’s mobile phone. Natalya made him a promise: “When the fighting calms down, I will come.”
Artem and a dozen schoolmates had been loaded up by Russian troops and transferred to a school further inside Russian-occupied Ukraine.
While Natalya was relieved to know where he was being held, reaching him would not be easy. They were now on different sides of the front line of a full-blown war, and border crossings from Ukraine into Russian-occupied territory were closed.
But months later, when a neighbour brought back one of her son’s schoolmates, she learnt about a charity that was helping mothers bring their children home.
Since it is now illegal for men of military age to leave Ukraine, Natalya and a group of women assisted by Save Ukraine completed a nerve-racking, 5000km journey through Poland, Belarus and Russia to gain entry to Russian-occupied territory in eastern Ukraine and Crimea to retrieve Artem and 15 other children. Then they had to take another circuitous journey back.
In the 13 months since the invasion, thousands of Ukrainian children have been displaced, moved or forcibly transferred to camps or institutions in Russia or Russian-controlled territory, in what Ukraine and rights advocates have condemned as war crimes.
Denne historien er fra July 2023-utgaven av Marie Claire Australia.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Marie Claire Australia
Marie Claire Australia
In the RED
Ready for a rouge romance? Let the colour of love inspire you
3 mins
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
HERE & NOW
Our must-haves of the month
1 min
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
Makeup magic
Bobbi Brown on reinvention, risk-taking and why real beauty will always win
4 mins
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
Vitamin D gets an A
The overlooked vitamin with beauty benefits
3 mins
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
WHISTLER WONDERLAND
From skiing the slopes to soaking in alpine spas, here's how to experience Whistler in style
5 mins
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
The perfectly peaceful life of PIA
She made her name as Pia Miller in Australia's favourite beachside soap, Home and Away. Now, she's found love and a fabulous new life in LA with her Hollywood-agent husband, Patrick Whitesell
9 mins
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
NEXT GEN ingredients
Feeling unsure (or completely confused) about the ingredients you need in your skincare routine? A new book will help set the record straight
5 mins
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
CHILDREN FOR SALE
Human sex trafficking is a multi-billion-dollar global industry, and many of the victims are children. Yolanthe Cabau is determined to end this horrific trade
8 mins
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
WHAT'S ON
Indulge your eyes, ears and soul in this month's culture-defining moments
1 mins
Febuary 2026
Marie Claire Australia
A BRAVE HEART - JANE FONDA
Actor and activist Jane Fonda has made real change for women and the environment during her nearly nine decades on the planet. marie claire talks to the global star and L'Oréal Paris ambassador about the celebration of women, living bravely and the unstoppable power of self-worth
5 mins
Febuary 2026
Translate
Change font size

