We Understand Each Other: “We Need Not Just Any Peace, but a Just Peace”

In her article for Journal B, Svitlana Prokopchuk writes about the changing perception of the war — both within Ukrainian society and among Europeans — four years after the beginning of the full-scale invasion. The author reflects on exhaustion, social divisions, and the ways people adapt to living under constant danger.

At the center of the article is a conversation with Swiss researcher Dr. Cécile Druey Schwab, who visited Kyiv as part of a research project on the events of 2013–2014 and the beginning of the war in the Donbas. She describes the contrast between the relative outward “normality” of life in the capital and the daily reality of air-raid alarms, nightly attacks, and the exhausting logistics caused by power outages. The researcher emphasizes the deep fatigue within society, but also the absence of any willingness to make concessions at any price for the sake of peace.

The main conclusion of the article is that discussions about the war must not be reduced to geopolitics alone. Above state interests stand people — their lives and their dignity. Ukraine needs not just peace, but a just peace.

Article here: https://journal-b.ch/artikel/wir-brauchen-nicht-irgendeinen-sondern-einen-gerechten-frieden/

Photo: Manuel Castellote

Share

Previous

Next

News

We Understand Each Other: “We Need Not Just Any Peace, but a Just Peace”...

In her article for Journal B, Svitlana Prokopchuk writes about the changing perception of the war — both within...

Play as a Model of Life: How Game Practices Help Ukrainians Integrate in Switzerland...

Text: Svitlana Prokopchuk Humanity has been playing games throughout its history. But in the context of migration, play takes...

“Starting Over Together”: How “Ukrainian Women in Bern” Became an Online Anchor for a New Integration...

Text: Svitlana Prokopchuk Daria Sokolska’s journey in Switzerland began in March 2022. Having arrived from Chernihiv, she was already...

Donate/ support
our activities