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ASPartOfMe
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10 May 2022, 10:49 am

How War and Displacement Traumatize People With Autism

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The true pioneers in the neurodivergent community are mostly parents, siblings, and relatives of someone with autism. They have spent years reaching out to other parents and friends who also usually have a child on the spectrum, creating social webs, knowledge bases, information hubs.

Inna Sergiyenko is one of these parents. Years ago, she became frustrated at the lack of support she was receiving in Ukraine for her son with autism, Misha. She realized that the main issue was a lack of structure and organization.

“Ukrainians are used to doing everything on their own,” Inna told me one sunny spring afternoon from her northern Kyiv apartment (only a 10-minute drive from a devastated Bucha). “There are so many people and organizations in Ukraine, who have their own way of getting help. We thought if we could connect them somehow, horizontally, imagine what we could accomplish.”

Iryna and her mother spent the last few years diligently creating networks, fighting to change legislation, and petitioning the Ukrainian government for money. The three main issues they focused on were the following:

Education:Bringing the best autism speakers, educators, therapists, and doctors from all over Europe and the United States to Ukraine via Zoom to empower disparate autism support organizations with the latest science and therapeutical methods.

Regulation:Inna and Iryna wanted to not only change legislation within the Ukrainian government but also to standardize care in Ukraine. They worked with Saudis; Swedes; Australians; Dr. Stephen Shore, a board member of Autism Speaks and professor at Adelphi; and even Maryna Poroshenko, the wife of former president Petro Poroshenko, a proponent for inclusion in schools and the workplace. Iryna pored through the data, calculated the costs, and presented to the Ukrainian government her findings; it was cheaper to care for the disabled than it was to neglect them.

Fundraising:They raised money not only for their centers, where parents, siblings, and caregivers could drop in to get help but also for the various programs that were within their network. They also lobbied for more government funding.

More than 12 million Ukrainians have left their homes. The World Health Organization estimates that one in a hundred children have autism, Autism Europe claims that there are close to 440,000 children with autism in Ukraine. It would be safe to assume that more than a 100,000 Ukrainian children with autism have been displaced and are leading a life of transition.

Autism Europe warns:
People with autism and their families appear to be overlooked in some cases by humanitarian aid agencies, as the nature or extent of the disability is not fully understood. This can leave vulnerable individuals and families without access to official channels of support.

Ukrainian adults with autism without intellectual disabilities are generally undiagnosed in Ukraine and many neighbouring countries and do not have access to any official support services or social protection. The war renders their situation even more challenging.

People with autism who have intellectual disabilities living in institutions or orphanages are cut off from their families and are particularly vulnerable


Some of the autistic people who are being affected by the war cane be seen in the documentary, “Not Forgotten - The Untold Story of Autism in Ukraine." Where are Alexandra, Svetlana, and their daughter Nastia, who moved from Donetsk to Kyiv to get better help for their autistic daughter? Where is Ludmila, high up in their apartment flat, and Vadim, her son with autism, whom she cannot let out of her sight? Where is Igor Kirienko who we in the touching Youtube video, waving good-bye to his 3-and-a-half-year-old son with autism who is packed on a westbound train with hundreds of other panicked women and children? With tears in his eyes, Igor says his son knows 46 countries, but not about the war in his own country of Ukraine.

Inna told me melancholically, “This is the problem. You suddenly have all these Ukrainian refugee autistic children who are regressing. They need help.”

There is martial law in Ukraine, people are sometimes forced to stay inside all day, employment has been hindered, the price of gas and food has risen, but there are still heating, water, and electricity bills. Carers and therapists still need to be paid.

“We don’t need sensitivity toys,” Iryna said. “We need money to keep the lights on in our centers and to get the help to the parents in need.”


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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity

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“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman