A few days after that, I was due to speak at an event and talk about how we in Zaporizhzhia are developing accessibility. But before my eyes stood 10 December. And 6 December 2024, when people in their cars were burned alive because a missile struck an intersection at 18:37, during rush hour.
That day, I spoke not about accessibility, but about the fact that people must, first and foremost, be alive. Article 3 of the Constitution of Ukraine states that the human being, their life, honour and dignity are the highest social value. Until we ensure this, it is difficult to speak about accessibility. Yes, it matters — but staying alive matters more. Having a chance to wake up matters more. After my speech, several people came up to me and said: ‘Thank you. You told the truth. Even though we were not ready to hear it.’
Perhaps it was then that I first truly understood: dignity is also very hard. Because it begins where we choose the truth, even when that truth is uncomfortable.
Vasyl Sukhomlynskyi once said that dignity is the wisdom to keep oneself in check. And we are holding on. Each of us has wrapped ourselves in our own arms and is holding tight, not to lose our sanity during the war. When everything you loved, built and hoped for is being destroyed. All that remains is to keep yourself together. To believe in yourself. To trust yourself. To trust those close to you. And that trust, too, is dignity. The victory of humanity over fear and pain is the highest expression of strength of spirit that is possible.
Life offers no instructions on how to preserve one’s dignity when chaos surrounds us. Each of us develops our own formula: where we live, how we work, what prospects we have; whether we have a family, a home; whether we pay our taxes, support the front, save even one life; whether we endured when we wanted to fall, whether we fell, whether we rose again; whether we held on to our community, our municipality, our state — even when the collective ‘we’ was beginning to dissolve.
These criteria change. And very often, they fail.
That is why I am convinced of something else: dignity is not measured by achievements. It is defined by an inner belief in human worth — one’s own and that of others. Even in the darkest of times.
For me, dignity means being honest with oneself. It is the readiness to say what is unpopular.
It is responsibility for one’s actions. It is the ability to remain useful even when the system is faltering. It is the commitment to safeguard the collective ‘we’ of one’s own community, because without our shared, state-centred community, there can be no expectation of rights being upheld, nor of the triumph of light.
And above all, human dignity does not end where fear begins.
Dignity does not allow fear to turn us into someone else. When there are chaos, danger and uncertainty all around, when a person confronts loss and pain, it is dignity that helps us remain human.
Every choice made with dignity is a step towards oneself and towards others. It is the choice to save those you can, even when you fear for your own life.
That is why dignity is not an abstract concept, but a concrete, everyday choice — often deeply uncomfortable and difficult, yet honest.
Every one of us encounters fear — at home, at work, in a city that lives just steps away from the frontline. That is why dignity is our shield against fear, an inner support that allows us to remain human despite everything and to safeguard our community, our shared ‘we’ of the Ukrainian nation within our own state.