When you are standing on a skateboard, you have to concentrate incredibly: find your balance, keep your body tension: skateboarding leaves no space for brooding. Thoughts of an unhappy love, or the war in your country, disappear for just a moment. That gave 25-year-old Ukrainian professional skater Yurii Korotun the idea of teaching skateboarding to young refugees. So that after weeks in exile and staying in the hall, they can get physically and mentally active again and, above all, so that they can escape from reality 5 hours per day, twice a week at Gleis D Skatehalle of Hanover, Germany since April 6.
Almost seven months after the beginning of the conflict, 1 of the 6 million Ukrainian refugees who have fled Ukraine due to the war have been welcomed in Germany. The city of Hanover is one of the most significant convenient drop-off points: its geographical position marks it a major hub to the north of the country, as well as other countries of the European Union.
To deal with the large influx of refugees, the City of Hanover, together with the federal state of Lower Saxony, has rented the huge Hall 27 of the trade fair grounds (Messegelände) to host Ukrainian families. The 31,100-square-meter hall is home to 1,152 people waiting for long-term accommodation. Among these refugees, there are countless children and teenagers, lost on the outskirts of the city, waiting for better days.
The Russo-Ukrainian war has forced millions of citizens to flee their homes. If they have not taken the roads of exile into the European Union or to Russia, many displaced people have found refuge in Lviv, Ukraine. Despite some bombings, the city, located in the western part of the country and 70 kilometers away from the Polish border, has become an essential and safe hub for the refugees who wish to settle temporarily. Nicknamed "capital of the west", Lviv, which had a population of about 700,000 inhabitants before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, has seen its population increase by 30 percent since February 24, 2022. As a result, the war has turned the city into a humanitarian crossroads, where food and goods arrive from all over the country as well as from abroad. These are then shipped on a daily basis to the most heavily impacted cities by the Russian offensives.
During wartime, sports activities are both a breath of fresh air and a creative outlet. Skateboarding and BMX are no exception for Ukrainians in general, and amongst them, Lviv inhabitants. However, these urban cultures without borders suffer from total supply disruptions due to the difficulty of transporting equipment from Western countries, and the economic sanctions imposed on Russia. Thus, both local and refugee skateboarders and BMX riders can hardly forget, for a while, the dramatic conflict by focusing on their respective passion. Their shared misfortune united the usually separated communities of skateboarders and BMX riders, and the European and international community mobilize their strengths to help them.
As a symbol of solidarity and community spirit of these urban cultures, volunteers from the Gleis D Skatehalle in Hanover, Germany accompanied by Gabriel Goldsack, the founder of the NGO Share a Bike Share a Smile, organized a humanitarian convoy to Lviv at the end of August 2022 in a very short time. Concerned about the refugees’ wellbeing who are victims of a conflict which has lasted for more than a year now, Gleis D members together with Ukrainian professional skateboarder Yurii Korotun have already initiated skateboarding courses for young Ukrainian refugees in Hanover since April 2022.
After having been put in contact with two Ukrainian skateboarding associations SkateUkraine and Lviv Skateboarding as well as BMX store Bike Stuff, the participants of the inventive project Cargo Mission transported 74 skateboards, 9 BMX and many spare parts with destination Lviv and even further, meant for local and refugee riders alike.
Despite the apprehension of experiencing a country at war and the incurred risks, the volunteers made a 2,000-kilometer journey from Berlin, Germany, via Poland to Lviv by van, spanning a period of 4 days. This surge of solidarity allowed the distribution, in Lviv and in cities affected by the Russian offensives, of equipment necessary to the youth in search of freedom of expression to foresee a peaceful future.