Boiling over in the morning


Streltsov (right) who founded Radio Boiling Over a year ago. — ©2024 The New York Times Company

IT was the middle of the night in early January when a Russian missile streaked in and exploded in the centre of Kharkiv, blasting down walls and shattering windows.

The next day, people went shopping and to work, ate out in restaurants and clogged the streets with traffic jams, almost as if nothing had happened.

But behind the business-as-usual veneer, residents of Kharkiv have been seething. Over the past month, Ukraine’s second-largest city has taken the brunt of Russia’s missile campaign, which has killed and wounded dozens of people, blown up buildings and unnerved everyone.

The Kharkiv Palace Hotel, one of the city’s most popular hotels and a frequent venue for foreign journalists was severely damaged by a Russian attack on Dec. 30, in Kharkiv, Ukraine. — ©2024 The New York Times CompanyThe Kharkiv Palace Hotel, one of the city’s most popular hotels and a frequent venue for foreign journalists was severely damaged by a Russian attack on Dec. 30, in Kharkiv, Ukraine. — ©2024 The New York Times Company

It’s an almost daily torment. To vent, Kharkiv’s residents have a dedicated outlet: Radio Boiling Over, a new FM station.

“This is Boiling Over in the Morning,” Volodymyr Noskov, the host of the morning call-in show, said on a recent broadcast. “What are you boiling over about today?”

In Kharkiv, a sprawling city of universities and factories, coping has taken many forms.

Nearly two years into the war, the city is opening schools underground. Psychologists visit strike sites to calm residents. Plywood goes up immediately over blown-out windows.

“Keep Calm and Carry On Studying,” reads a sign at the entrance to one university.

Pedestrians passing the aftermath of a Russian missile attack which struck a residential area in central Kharkiv. — ©2024 The New York Times CompanyPedestrians passing the aftermath of a Russian missile attack which struck a residential area in central Kharkiv. — ©2024 The New York Times Company

Amid the carnage, Radio Boiling Over, which went on the air a year ago, is becoming one of the most popular local media outlets. It serves as a megaphone for the fears and frustrations that simmer within a population under near constant assault.

“Despite all Russia is doing, the city is still living,” said Yevhen Streltsov, founder of Radio Boiling Over.

But, he said, “people are getting tired because their nerves are not made of iron” and they want to complain.

While there are occasional complaints about local bureaucrats and inefficiency, most of the anger is directed at Russia, especially after strikes.

“Burn in hell until the seventh generation. Curse the unwashed Russians,” a listener, Tetyana Arshava, wrote on the station’s Instagram page after one high-casualty missile attack.

The station broadcasts hourly news updates and talk shows in the morning and evening, with a focus on missile strikes; interviews with soldiers on the front line; investigations of Russian war crimes; and of course the anger of hundreds of thousands of people forced to worry daily about their safety. The station’s name, Radio Nakypilo, can also be translated as Radio Fed Up.

Pedestrians passing the aftermath of a Russian missile attack which struck a residential area in central Kharkiv. — ©2024 The New York Times CompanyPedestrians passing the aftermath of a Russian missile attack which struck a residential area in central Kharkiv. — ©2024 The New York Times Company

It receives funding from the National Endowment for Democracy, an American non-profit financed by the US government, and the European Endowment for Democracy, with the mission of covering local news in a community that, even by the standards of Ukraine’s battered cities, has endured a harrowing 23 months.

Just 36km from the Russian border, Kharkiv was an early target of invading Russian ground forces and was partly encircled. People fled. Of the pre-invasion population of about two million, 1.2 million remain today.

Barrages of ballistic missiles fly in anywhere from once a week to daily, arriving so quickly that alarms can provide no more than 40 seconds of warning. Parents rush children into bathtubs or, at the least, away from windows.

Over the past month, Russian missiles ravaged two hotels, Kharkiv Palace and Park Hotel; blew out windows in popular restaurants, which quickly reopened; and hit apartment blocks. The pre-dawn strike on the apartment building early last month injured 17 people.

“This is our everyday life,” Streltsov said.

Yet despite the mortal threat, ballistic missile strikes have become so common in Kharkiv that Radio Boiling Over does not interrupt its music programming if only one missile has landed, Yevhen said. Announcers will cut in only for volleys or a catastrophic strike.

Kharkiv is handicapped because the military’s best air defence systems, including US-provided Patriots, are mostly reserved for the capital, Kyiv.

A homeowner looking at the Kharkiv Palace Hotel from his apartment, also damaged by airstrikes. The city’s air defences are weaker than those of the capital, Kyiv. — ©2024 The New York Times CompanyA homeowner looking at the Kharkiv Palace Hotel from his apartment, also damaged by airstrikes. The city’s air defences are weaker than those of the capital, Kyiv. — ©2024 The New York Times Company

So it endures the regular mayhem that comes with being the closest large city to the Russian border.

“Nobody has this experience anywhere in the world,” the mayor, Ihor Terekhov, said in an interview. He said people were generally coping well.

“There are strikes, yes, but no panic.”

Terekhov has been promoting a programme of building schools underground, to protect them from missiles. The school district has built five in corridors of subway stops, called MetroSchools, and is close to finishing a purpose-built subterranean elementary school for 450 students, with only the football field on the surface.

The subway schools are at once an uplifting scene of children, boisterous and happy, finally back in classrooms and among friends, and a post-apocalyptic vision of a world where schools are designed similar to bunkers.

“It’s really surrealistic,” said Iryna Tarasenko, director of the city’s department of education, which is overseeing the underground school programme. “This is the reality we live in, these are the conditions.”

Radio Boiling Over’s mission is to capture that reality, and give people an outlet to let off steam, as well as provide useful practical information.

Students at a MetroSchool, one of five schools that opened in the subway stations of Kharkiv. — ©2024 The New York Times CompanyStudents at a MetroSchool, one of five schools that opened in the subway stations of Kharkiv. — ©2024 The New York Times Company

On a recent evening, it was reporting on a missile strike in the Kharkiv region, but not in the city. One woman was killed. The station was taking calls.

“We’ll just start the programme with a very important topic,” anchor Filip Dykan said.

“Kharkiv is getting bombed. You’ve all seen it. Please call to tell us what is boiling over with you.”

The government gave Radio Boiling Over space on the FM spectrum for two purposes: to report local news and to jam a Russian psychological warfare operation that had been beaming in news on the same frequency. The Russian channel sent eerie, bizarre content intended to unnerve civilians and soldiers, including repeating the phrase “We will kill you.”

With the switch to Radio Boiling Over, people started to tune in, Streltsov said. “People listen because we are fast” with news about missile strikes and fighting along the front nearby, he said.

Roman Korobenko, a reporter for the station, said people younger than 40, who came of age after the Soviet breakup, were fed up with Russia. Older residents had mixed feelings, he said, sometimes lamenting that war had come even though Russians and Ukrainians had previously lived in peace.

Some people are annoyed with the constant wail of ambulance sirens, he said. Some are just continually gripped by anxiety.

Mostly, Korobenko said, people are angry.

“These days,” he said. “Everybody is boiling over.” — ©2024 The New York Times Company

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