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At a holiday celebration in southern Ukraine, ‘kids still need miracles.’

A woman and her daughter walking past holiday decorations with food aid and presents.Credit…David Guttenfelder for The New York Times
Hundreds of children gathered at a local school, awaiting Saint Nicholas.Credit…David Guttenfelder for The New York Times

MYKOLAIV, Ukraine — Some of the children who sat on Saint Nicholas’s lap asked for iPhones. Others asked for peace.

Others, said Yevhen Vorobyov, who was dressed as Saint Nicholas, asked for air defense. Some just wanted clean water, he said, “so that they can finally have a normal shower.”

It is far from a normal holiday season in Mykolaiv, a city besieged by war and decimated by Russian missiles. But on Monday, as children gathered in a boarding school in the southern Ukrainian city to celebrate Saint Nicholas Day, there was still time for celebration.

Nearly a hundred children visited the school, which serves students with special needs, to play games, visit Saint Nicholas and receive presents, including handmade dolls from Canadian police officers and tangerines from local territorial defense soldiers.

“Whatever war is going on, the kids still need miracles,” said Mr. Vorobyov, who donned a long white artificial beard to play the part of Saint Nicholas at the school where his wife, Svitlana, is the headmaster.

The gathered students sang songs, played games and received donated presents from near and far.Credit…David Guttenfelder for The New York Times

Since the beginning of Russia’s invasion in February, the couple evacuated some of their students to safer areas in western Ukraine and opened their doors to provide psychological help to the children who, like their own 8-year-old son and 15-year-old daughter, stayed in Mykolaiv.

Those children often become withdrawn, don’t want to play with other children and are scared to leave the house, said Mr. Vorobyov, who leads another school in Mykolaiv that works with disabled children.

“One kid asked, ‘Mom, please put chairs around me so that bullets and shells don’t hit me,” he said. Others, he added, have suicidal thoughts.

Mr. Vorobyov, a trained rehabilitation specialist, said he and his wife use art, sports and what he called “laughter therapy” to reach children who are struggling with their mental health. “We want not only to save people’s lives,” he said, “but also their sanity.”

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