KYIV, Ukraine (AP) – Each morning at 9 o’clock, Kyiv stops for a minute. Traffic lights turn red, and the steady beat of a metronome on loudspeakers signals 60 seconds of reflection. Cars idle in the middle of the street as drivers step out and stand with heads bowed. Across Ukraine – in cafes, gyms, schools, on television and even on the front lines – people pause to remember.
A nation pauses: Ukraine’s daily moment of remembrance endures through intensified Russian attacks
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) – Each morning at 9 o’clock, Kyiv stops for a minute.
Traffic lights turn red, and the steady beat of a metronome on loudspeakers signals 60 seconds of reflection. Cars idle in the middle of the street as drivers step out and stand with heads bowed.
Across Ukraine – in cafes, gyms, schools, on television and even on the front lines – people pause to remember those killed in Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Near a growing outdoor memorial at Kyiv’s Maidan Square, four friends gathered with cardboard signs that read, “Stop. Honor.” Around them, flags, photos and candles for fallen service members formed a dense mosaic of grief and pride.