| |   |  Ukraine’s Underground Generation Addressing the isolation of young people has become an urgent priority in eastern Ukraine.
  By  Robert F. Worth Photographs by Jedrzej Nowicki
  October 19, 2025, 7 AM ET 
  In a town called Staryi Saltiv, in northeastern   Ukraine, many buildings lie in ruins after years of war, but only one   has been demolished twice: the district school. Russian missiles leveled   it in early 2022. The town gradually raised the money not just to   reconstruct it but to enlarge and improve it, adding new facilities for   disabled children. Then, just days after the work was completed in early   May, the Russians sent five Shahed drones into it, leaving it a   burned-out ruin.
  “We   don’t know why,” Iryna Glazunova, the town’s director of education and   culture, told me. “I think the overall point is to destroy Ukraine.”....
  ....Russian   drones have made a clear sky into a source of terror for Ukrainian   young people. Most have taken instruction only by Zoom since the   full-scale Russian invasion began, in 2022. They study in apartments   they share with their parents, with frequent interruptions, such as when   the power goes out or when the air-raid sirens send them fleeing to   shelters. Many are so isolated and anxious that they are unable to   imagine a future.
  The   plight of Ukraine’s young people is a direct consequence of Russia’s   effort to eradicate their national identity. In a little less than four   years, Russia has damaged or destroyed some 3,500 schools in an apparent   campaign to...
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