Elena Kuklova’s modest leather purse holds some of her few possessions to have survived almost 12 months of Russian bombardments.

She sits gracefully on a wooden chair in a building with hundreds of Holocaust survivors who had gathered at the bottom floor of the Chabad-Lubavitch center in Odessa, Ukraine, to receive food handouts.

Their coats and gloves don’t keep them from shivering in the February cold. Kuklova’s red hat with a big bow is positioned perfectly on her gray head. The 84-year-old is wrapped in a stunning fur coat, with a red scarf tied around her neck – large black polka dots jump from its fabric.

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