Through the Eyes of Children: Quotes from Childhood Interrupted by War in Ukraine, Illustrated by Artists
By (Author) Voices of Children Charitable Foundation
HarperCollins Publishers Inc
HarperOne
14th February 2025
21st November 2024
United States
General
Non Fiction
History of art
Photography: portraits and self-portraiture
Biography: historical, political and military
Refugees and political asylum
Curriculum planning and development
Political activism / Political engagement
Complementary therapies, healing and health
Educational: Arts, general
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Death and grief
Paperback
224
Width 152mm, Height 169mm
274g
A heartrending and beautiful trilingual book that gives voice to the children of war-torn Ukraine, interspersed with moving works of art.
What is it like to be a child living in a country under siegeor living in a foreign city or land far from everything you have known and loved In this moving and unforgettable book, Ukraines children speak out about growing up in amid the violence, terror, and death of war. Through the Eyes of Children is a collection of childrens quotes paired with evocative color artwork. Each quote appears in Cyrillic, transliterated Ukrainian, and English, making the book a tool for both language learning and language preservation.
Each copy sold funds a weeks mental health assistance for a Ukrainian child.
"Kids and war are incompatible. And yet when you read what war-time kids dream of and remember you cannot but feel anguish for their disrupted childhood. Both children and adults will understand and appreciate this book." Andrey Kurkov, author of International Booker Prize longlisted novels The Silver Bone and Jimi Hendrix Live in Lviv
The Voices of Children Charitable Foundation was officially established during the filming of the Oscar-nominated documentary A House Made of Splinters by Azad Safarov, the films assistant director and line producer, and Olena Rozvadovska, a human rights activist. Since the outbreak of the full-scale war in Ukraine in 2022, the Foundation has helped more than 4,500 children to receive professional psychological support and provided humanitarian aid to more than 13,000 families.