Peterborough Woman Living And Working In Ukraine Now Safe In Ireland Reflects On The Beauty of Kyiv And Worries About The Country She Called Home
/Born and raised in Peterborough, Ciara Shaughnessy was living and working in Kyiv, Ukraine until the threat of a Russian invasion led her and her husband to find safety in Ireland just weeks before Russia’s first attack.
Ciara and her husband in front of the National Opera House in Kyiv, across from their apartment. Ciara is wearing a Vyshvanka, a traditional Ukrainian dress known for it’s embroidery. Photo courtesy of Ciara Shaugnessy.
Shaughnessy, a teacher who has lived and worked in countries like the United Arab Emirates and Japan, moved to Ukraine to work and build a life in July 2021.
Together, she and her husband lived in the Golden Gate neighbourhood. This was the main gate in the 11th-century fortifications of Kyiv, the capital of Kievan Rus.
“I had the privilege of experiencing what it was like to live in beautiful Kyiv,” said Shaughnessy. “It’s a city full of culture and amazing restaurants, music and generosity. There are buskers in the streets at any moment, in any sort of weather. The parks come alive, there are lovely string lights everywhere. It’s just a really romantic place.”
Ukraine’s Independence Monument in central Kyiv at sunrise one day before Vladimir Putin gave the order for a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Photo by Daniel Leal/AFP/Getty Images.
While living in Kyiv, Shaughnessy discovered through a regular check-up that she had thyroid cancer.
“Part of a routine checkup in Ukraine is a thyroid scan. These haven’t been part of regular checkups I’ve had before - including any in Canada,” she said. “It was just a regular checkup and they found a nodule. After a biopsy, we found out it was a tumour.”
She credits Ukrainian doctors with saving her life.
“They literally saved my life. I received the treatment I needed and then in three weeks I had to evacuate,” explained Shaughnessy. “If I didn't move to Ukraine, I don’t think the cancer would have been found. I worry about the people who helped me receive the treatment and care I needed.”
She received radioactive iodine treatment in Kyiv in December and is now cancer-free.
Shaughnessy says that to her knowledge much of the medical team that helped her through her diagnosis are still in Kyiv.
Emergency personnel amid building debris from a missile strike in the Lobanovsky district on Feb. 26, 2022, in Kiev, Ukraine. Photo by Laurent Van Der Stockt, Getty Images News, Getty Images.