He got married in 1994 and, a few months later, brought his wife to the Ukrainian capital. “At that time, most of my family members in India didn’t even know the name of Ukraine or Kyiv. We had a tough time in making them understand that it’s a newly independent country from the erstwhile Soviet Union,” Paramita reminisced. The couple started learning both Russian and the local Ukrainian languages for survival soon after their respective arrivals in that part of the world, and these days, they often speak to each other in both Russian and Ukrainian with almost native-level fluency, apart from predominantly using their mother tongue of Bengali, at home. “But today, we can’t find any language or words to express our pain and agony,” Paramita remarked. They built their dream home brick by brick on the outskirts of Kyiv a few years ago, but now, they are worried. “We don’t even know whether it will withstand the ongoing war or not. It’s too much of a trauma for us,” she anguished.