The phone rings constantly. It is located on a table in the cafeteria in the skating arena Vikingaskeppet in Hamar, where the all-round World Cup in skating is arranged. Svetlana Johnsen is sitting with her daughter Anne Marie. They have just spoken to Svetlana’s mother, who is stuck in the town of Sumy in northeastern Ukraine, which was hit hard by the Russian invasion early on.
– Mother is in shock, says Svetlana. She hears how it is being bombed and sees the Russian planes coming from Kursk which is only 15-160 km away, on the other side of the border. We try to make sure she can come here, but the situation is difficult to see. The trains do not run and the situation on the roads is uncertain.
– My mother is a post-war child but my aunts were born before the Second World War. Imagine having to relive the horrors of your childhood? It’s completely unreal. I see the pictures from there … These are the same streets I walked on as a child.
Svetlana Johnsen came to Norway 1995 – the same year she became Ukrainian champion in sprint – and has lived in the area around Hamar since then. She competed for Ukraine in the 1998 Olympics in Nagano, after which she ended her active career. In Norway, she has been politically involved and sat in the Storting for the Progress Party during the last term. Now she works as head of the refugee reception center in Alvdal.