© 2024 St. Louis Public Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

In an Ozarks alterations shop, Russians and Ukrainians lean on common bonds to avoid tension

 The staff at Martin’s Alterations in Springfield, Missouri are originally from several different countries, including Ukraine, Belarus and Russia.
Jennifer Moore
/
KSMU
The staff at Martin’s Alterations in Springfield, Missouri are originally from several different countries, including Ukraine, Belarus and Russia.

Inside an alterations shop on South Campbell Avenue in Springfield, Missouri, Ukrainian immigrant Andrey Vakhrushev is having tea with his staff and revving up the sewing machines ahead of another busy day.

As Russian forces continue their invasion of Ukraine, his brother is now in a war zone back home. Vakhrushev says he’s doing his best to keep in touch.

“He has 12 kids and they need to be fed,” he said. “Now it's a very bad situation. Just as soon as they hear sirens, they go to the shelter [for] five or 10 minutes or one hour sitting there scared, crying,” he said.

His family is in the Trokosy region in central Ukraine, he said.

Vakhrushev and his wife, both Ukrainian citizens, own Martin Alterations. Their employees are from Russia and Belarus, both of which are directly involved in the military conflict. Russia’s invading troops are using Belaurus as a staging ground, given its nearly 700-mile border with Ukraine.

Despite that, Vakhrushev says there’s no tension between the staff here.

“Not at all. We are friendly. We are nice. We are simple, easy people. We are always nice to each other and kind. We can hear our families’ situations or stories or needs because we are all one nation,” Vakhrushev said.

When asked what he means when he speaks of “one nation,” he says he’s referring to the countries that once comprised the former Soviet Union.

A common heritage between warring countries

Vakhrushev was born in 1977, meaning he was still a kid when the Cold War ended. But he remembers life from back then. It wasn't that long ago when the members of the Soviet Union were unified by one central communist government, even as they maintained their unique identities.

“Because most of us are adults here. We were born in Soviet Union and grew up in Soviet Union, so we used to be together. We used to go to any country [in the Soviet Union] we wanted. Even people got together for marriage. Families moved from Ukraine to Russia, Russia to Ukraine or Belarus,” he said.

One of Vakhrushev’s employees, Nina Yermakovich, is from neighboring Belarus. Another, Yelena Byrk, is from Russia.

“I was born in Siberia,” Byrk said.

Her father was imprisoned twice by the Soviet Union for openly practicing Christianity, she said. Eventually, he was expelled from the country and hopscotched his away across Europe before seeking a new beginning in the United States.

Yelena Byrk followed her father to the U.S. in 1989. She says her life is a testament to the extremely close bonds between Russia and Ukraine. Even though she hails from Russia, as a younger woman she donned a traditional Ukrainian dress and wed a Ukrainian man. Her niece is also married to Ukrainian, she said, and her relatives are there now.

“Russian people [don’t] want war,” Byrk said. “Everybody prays. I pray for peace in the Ukraine and Russia and America.”

Here in this small alterations shop in the Missouri Ozarks, the workers are helping each other through this difficult time. Despite that their home countries are now at war, they say they'll continue to respect what makes them unique while leaning on the threads that bind them together.

Copyright 2022 KSMU

Jennifer Moore
As the Journalist-in-Residence at Missouri State University, Jennifer teaches undergraduate and graduate students, oversees a semester-long, team reporting project, and contributes weekly stories to KSMU Radio in the area of public affairs journalism.