Chicagoan trapped in war-torn Ukraine makes it to Poland

‘It feels like it hasn’t stopped, like it’s just been one long day — I mean we still haven’t really slept,’ Olga Tsoi of Rogers Park told the Chicago Sun-Times Monday.

Olga Tsoi (right) and her mother Oksana Tsoi in Kraków, Poland, hours after crossing the border from Ukraine.

Olga Tsoi (right) and her mother Oksana Tsoi in Kraków, Poland, hours after crossing the border from Ukraine.

Olga Tsoi

A Chicago woman who was trapped in Ukraine by Russia’s invasion of the country has made it to Poland — but she says the journey for her and her mother is only beginning.

“It feels like it hasn’t stopped, like it’s just been one long day — I mean we still haven’t really slept,” Olga Tsoi of Rogers Park told the Chicago Sun-Times Monday. “We are here now, but your brain hasn’t settled because you are constantly thinking about the next goal, and with each of those goals you have tunnel vision, which takes all your mental fortitude to accomplish it.”

Tsoi, 31, grew up in Ukraine. Visiting family there and recovering from recent knee surgery, she was supposed to return to Chicago days before Russia sent troops and tanks into Ukraine.

She said having a goal-by-goal mentality is how she and her mother Oksana Tsoi got out of Ukraine and made it to Kraków, Poland.

First, when they were awakened from their sleep as bombs and missiles landed near their apartment in Kyiv, they needed to find a bomb shelter.

They found one in a nearby school’s basement. Then, when they decided to flee the country, they focused on finding a bus and getting to Lviv. After that, it was time to get to the border of Poland and western Ukraine.

They crossed that border late Sunday.

The 550-mile trip took more than two days.

Now, they need to get to the United States embassy in Warsaw so Tsoi’s mother can seek asylum and come back with her to Chicago.

“I still don’t think it has hit her just yet,” Tsoi said. “Like, she still is thinking this is temporary or just some sort of phase. She is still talking about how she forgot to water the plants in her apartment and that she hopes they don’t die when she gets back.”

Tsoi and her mother haven’t figured out how they will get to Warsaw, which is about 180 miles away. They are fortunate to be at a hotel where they have warm showers and a hot meal.

But it is hard for Tsoi to feel relieved in this moment. The rest of her family is still in Ukraine. And her home is still under attack.

Her father and other relatives weren’t able to get out in time in southern Ukraine. They live in Kherson, which has been completely blocked off by Russian military as it continues to make an offensive push in the south.

“I can’t just deliver food to him, you know?” Tsoi said. “We are constantly checking in on our loved ones, just hoping they are OK and safe.”

She and her mother are among more than 500,000 refugees who have fled Ukraine since Russia launched its war.

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