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Ukrainian Manitobans relive historical pain, offer help from afar amid Russian siege

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WARNING: This story contains graphic images.

Orysia Kulick couldn’t stop the tears from coming.

Even as an assistant professor in political studies at the University of Manitoba, she struggles to make sense of the Russian siege in Ukraine.

“I think everyone’s just in a state of shock, horror, anxiety and everyone is just trying to process it,” she said. “There’s a lot of sharing of information, we’re checking in with our people back in Ukraine, we’re talking to one another, trying to hold one another up.

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“There’s a lot of pain.”

Being from a Ukrainian family, Kulick has witnessed that pain among those watching an assault

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