In the photos, the Darnytsk RDA showed how kindergarten No. 500, mutilated by the aggressor, was repaired.
In the traditional column “Let’s rebuild! We will win!” Darnytsia RDA tells about the objects that were damaged by Russian strikes on the capital. There are many of them in this area. One of them is the “Abetka” children’s preschool, which is located on Olena Mishuga Street, 3B.
In the reviews that were written until February 24, 2022, there are exclusively positive words about this children’s institution.
The main ones are: “Quiet and safe place for children”…
There is no need to explain why the kindergarten became a target for the Russian military on the 353rd day of the war. Civilian objects are their favorite targets, and taking the lives of Ukrainians is their goal.
However, the Ukrainians themselves do not agree with this. That is why the Armed Forces repel the aggressor at the front, and in the cities “heal” wounds after missile strikes. This applies to both housing and communal facilities.
“Abetka” is a preschool in a young district with many families with children. It is designed for 13 groups, where during the day there were 245 little Kyivans from the age of two.
The kindergarten is open from seven in the morning until 7:00 p.m. Three quality, balanced meals are provided. The facility for children has a swimming pool, a museum of Ukrainian culture and life “lada”, where children get to know national treasures, priceless creations of people of different generations.
Everything for the early intellectual development of young Ukrainians — in communal kindergarten No. 500, in the Darnytsky district of the capital. So it is clear that restoring it was extremely important.
Specialists who are especially needed in war and post-war times work here: practical psychologists, teachers who use personality-oriented methods of raising children.
Now all this can be restored, because the premises are ready for work and reception of small Kyivans.
Today, Kyiv has sheltered tens of thousands of forced migrants. People left their hometowns because of the war with their children. 138,000 schoolchildren started the school year in the capital, 3,600 of them are children of the so-called IDPs.
This figure may grow, because the Russians are destroying cities and villages, the de-occupied territories are not yet ready for a full-fledged life. Therefore, many Ukrainians want to survive until full recovery in civilized conditions together with their children. And Kyiv provides them with such opportunities.
School No. 289 on Denysa Antipova Street was reconstructed in Darnytskyi district. In addition to new windows, doors, and exterior decoration, the territory of the educational institution was also put in order.
Olga SKOTNIKOVA