Victoria Yegorova lives in our shelter, who came from Vuhledar, Donetsk region, with her husband Konstantin and newborn daughter Sofia, who was only 10 days old when the war started.We left the city on the first day of the war – February 24, 2022. First, we moved to Velyka Novosilka, then, when the fighting started there, we took an evacuation train to Pokrovsk. We stayed in this city for some time, but when it became dangerous there, we had to leave (when we left, the local train station was destroyed a week later).Running away from the war as far as possible, we ended up in Dnipro and rented a room in a hostel. Then we found out about the Dobro na Amur shelter and moved there. The family had practically no belongings with them: they packed quickly and had almost nothing to take except food, diapers and documents. People who cared helped them on the way, and volunteers took care of providing them with things and food in the shelter. Her husband got a job, and Victoria takes care of the family and looks after her daughter (she is now one and a half years old).It is not yet known how long the couple will live in the shelter. But even after the war is over, the family has nowhere to return to – their home is completely destroyed: an enemy missile hit the building where they lived, collapsing the roof and destroying the walls.