When the president of the Kyiv School of Economics (KSE) began to post photos of his daily life to?social media in?November, it was a?gut reaction. A?day earlier, Russian air strikes had hit Ukraine’s power grid, plunging the city into darkness.
“I didn’t have a plan – I realised we had no heating and no?water for a?while, and somehow I?felt it would be interesting for the world to?know how people are trying to get through the war,” said Tymofiy Mylovanov.
His tweets have resonated with readers around the world. Professor Mylovanov has accumulated more than 39,000 followers and has become an in-demand commentator for Western news outlets, explaining the war’s toll in hard numbers and – even more importantly, he believes – providing a?first-hand account of everyday life on the ground.
When 成人VR视频 spoke with Professor Mylovanov, he had just finished an interview with Al?Jazeera and had an upcoming on-air appointment with?CNN.
Previously Ukraine’s minister of economic development under the Honcharuk government and an adviser to its president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Professor Mylovanov knows well the value of good press. But he insisted that his decision to share his experiences was not an orchestrated PR mission.
“I’m fighting my own battle, for the world to stay connected to Ukraine,” he said. “I?wanted people to feel that we’re human. It’s easier for people to connect with us when they see us in our daily lives.”
Made up of observations on everyday minutiae and life at a university, his tweets are both simple and profound.
On the second day of the Kyiv blackout, he posted a video of students doing their work from a shelter and queueing at the university cafe.
“But students are here, and classes are at full speed (8.30am). Therefore we must have our fancy coffee at our cafe, which indeed is working,” he wrote.
In another tweet, he at Russia’s foreign affairs minister, Sergei Lavrov, simultaneously exposing the Kremlin’s barbarity.
“Lavrov is shocked by unisex bathrooms and calls them inhumane. I am proud to report that all bathrooms at the Kyiv School of Economics are unisex…What’s that blue water tank in our bathroom? That’s water to flush toilets [when] Lavrov’s ‘humane’ country bombs us and our water pump system stops working.”
An economist, Professor Mylovanov is keenly aware of the link between people connecting emotionally with the conflict and supporting Ukraine financially. His posts often come with an appeal for donations. Already, they’ve had a sizeable impact.
Recently, his followers donated ?37,000 to buy gifts for orphaned and refugee children in Ukraine after he posted of a KSE student-led fundraiser, noting that the only thing standing in the way of upscaling it was a lack of funding.
Crucially for KSE, Professor Mylovanov’s efforts have secured the university a mobile generator, a massive yellow box that will power the whole building when electricity goes out – something that’s increasingly important as Russia targets Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. Next on the plan, the university will drill a well so it can have running water even when main lines are down.
While undeniably, circumstances in Ukraine now are “much more difficult” than before the war, Professor Mylovanov said the atmosphere – at the university and beyond – was better than it’s ever been.
“Yesterday there was a snowstorm and traffic jams three hours long in the morning but by evening they actually cleaned it up. I think things work better than before the war…like everyone is a Navy Seal,” he said.
Meanwhile, at KSE, the faculty devotion to the curriculum is “amazing” and among students, motivation is “through the charts”, with roughly 70?per cent of students attending classes in person – a?rare feat in the country where the majority of education continues in online form.
Still, he admitted that there were certain less savoury things he leaves out of his media appearances. “Do we have fights? Yes. Is my roof leaking in two places? Yes.”
Not all KSE’s attempts to help the local community have panned out. When he offered a generator to a school in another city, an official there asked for a bribe to install it – an unfortunate reminder that Ukraine, however virtuous its wartime efforts may be, is not free of its pre-war corruption problem.
Still, Professor Mylovanov said such hang-ups were minor in the scheme of things.
“There are these bad apples, and if the war doesn’t fix them, I don’t know what can,” he joked.
These days, he has more serious concerns – chiefly, how Ukrainians will make it through a bitter winter. With Russian bombings leaving or running water, daily life has become unpredictable and at times exhausting. Because of the war, KSE colleagues have had to put in many more hours, and Professor Mylovanov worries about staff retention amid burnout.
“It takes a toll on them,” he said.
Still, his deep pride in the institution comes through, especially faith in his students, who are “very different” from previous cohorts.
“The people who go through school right now are going to be great generations of leaders,” he said. “They get things done.”
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Print headline: Daily social media wins for Ukraine