After fleeing alone to Newfoundland, Ukrainian boy begins Grade 11 in ‘second home’
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — In many ways, Serhii Semenets is like any other 17-year-old starting Grade 11 in Newfoundland this week. He likes playing guitar, he struggles with Shakespeare, and his ideal dinner is a plate of poutine.
But unlike most kids at Holy Heart of Mary High School, in St. John’s, Semenets is 6,000 kilometres away from his family; he last saw his mother 16 months ago. Weeks after Russia began its attack on Ukraine last year, Semenets’s mother hurried him onto a bus to Warsaw, Poland, just in time for him to board a plane to Newfoundland. He got on the plane by himself; his mother returned to the war.
“It was a little bit hard to say goodbye,” Semenets said in a recent interview. “Because you’re going to another country without your family and you don’t know when you will come back.”
Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022. Shortly after, the Newfoundland and Labrador government announced it would open an office in Warsaw to help fleeing Ukrainians relocate to Canada’s easternmost province. Over the next nine months, the government chartered four flights to carry Ukrainians from Warsaw to St. John’s.