Ukraine: Reclaiming home — Supporting accessibility in Sloviansk
For Ivan and Tanya*, life together has never been simple. Both live with disabilities, and their everyday routines require extra effort and patience. But in the face of war, displacement, and persistent barriers, they remain grounded in each other — and in the place they call home. With support from the Danish Refugee Council (DRC), their living space in Sloviansk has become safer and more accessible, allowing them to regain a sense of dignity and independence.
Ivan and Tanya met nearly twenty years ago in a sanatorium. He has lived with cerebral palsy since birth; she was diagnosed with polyarthritis as a child. From friendship grew a strong partnership, rooted in care and shared experience. When the war reached Donetsk in 2014, Tanya left her home and moved to Sloviansk to live with Ivan. Years later, in April 2022, they were forced to evacuate together.
Finding housing was unexpectedly difficult. “The landlord refused to rent us the flat,” Ivan says. “He said we wouldn’t be able to keep it clean, and that the wheelchair would ruin the floors.”
They turned to local authorities but were offered an apartment on the third floor — without a lift or ramp. “I couldn’t move inside without help. The steps, the uneven ground — it was too painful,” Tanya recalls. Eventually, the couple returned to Sloviansk, even though it didn’t feel safe.
Small changes, big impact
Back home, daily life remained complicated. The entrance to their house had no ramp, and the yard was uneven and full of holes. Tanya depended entirely on Ivan to push her wheelchair. When they reached out for help again, the mayor of Sloviansk connected them with DRC. “There was no dedicated programme at the time for adapting private homes,” says Anton, a DRC Shelter and Settlement Assistant. “But we knew they needed help, and used flexible donor funds to respond.”
DRC supported the couple with basic improvements: levelling the ground in the yard, adapting the entrance, and widening the front door to make it easier for Tanya to enter and leave independently. “Now I can move around without fear of falling,” she says. “It’s the first time I’ve felt this kind of comfort in years.”
The floor in the courtyard and the entrance to the house before and after renovation. ©DRC Ukraine, Sloviansk, Donetsk Oblast, March 2025, Krystyna Pashkina
A space of their own
In their small yard, Ivan grows vegetables and tends to young fruit trees. Inside, Tanya paints. “I get anxious sometimes, and painting helps,” she explains. Their bedroom walls are filled with her drawings — landscapes, city monuments, and quiet portraits of couples holding hands. “Art helps me stay hopeful,” she adds. “It reminds me what peace might look like.”
Moving toward inclusion
As of October 2023, more than 100,000 internally displaced people in Ukraine live with disabilities. For many of them, basic infrastructure remains out of reach. In shelters and modular housing sites, ramps, accessible toilets, and safe outdoor spaces are still rare. DRC continues to work with local partners to support accessible housing solutions where possible and to advocate for broader inclusion in humanitarian response. Because everyone deserves to feel safe — and at home.
Page not found
Foresight: Displacement forecasts
About us
Contact us
Help applying: FAQ and chat
Youth empowerment
Young refugees at the Summit of the Future
Other DRC websites
Ukraine: Quarterly protection monitoring reports
PRESSEMEDDELELSE: Den globale humanitære krise forværres, når store donorer skærer i støtten og tvungen fordrivelse accelererer
Agri-Tech Solutions for Better Climate Resilience in Displacement Affected Areas in Iraq
Poland: Tailoring free legal aid to protect refugees and vulnerable minorities
Kilometres of Ukraine's forests are contaminated with explosive ordnance: DRC helps make them safe
Ukraine: New windows and water supply — DRC improves living conditions in western Ukraine shelters for IDPs
Serbia: Ukrainian refugees attend online risk education
Press Release: A year of war in Sudan has created a deepening humanitarian crisis
The World's Biggest Opportunity Podcast
Project 21 - Protection Data for Informed Actions to the Sahel Crisis
DRC representation in Brussels
Anticipatory Action
Joint civil society statement on the Council’s position on the Return Regulation Proposal
PRAB reports
Protecting Rights At Borders
From hot tea on a small Danish train station to global humanitarian aid
DRC supports Ukraine’s NGOs that hand out the essentials among the most vulnerable
DRC in Ukraine: Emergency aid to Odesa
Borodianka town near Kyiv is in ruins. DRC calls on all parties to stop bombing civilians
Protection Monitoring Dash Board
Protection Monitoring Dash Board Mexico
Dashboards: Peru
Dashboards: Mexico
Dashboards: Colombia
Anticipatory Humanitarian Action for Displacement (AHEAD) model
SPIN: Pastoralist insecurity forecast model
DRC Diaspora Programme Ukrainian response
Where we work
Working at DRC
Salary package and benefits
Fraudulent website misusing DRC’s name and logo
Ukraine: Restoring agricultural production in conflict-affected areas
Education restores hope for displaced children in Apala
Growing up displaced. Understanding and addressing child protection risks in Uganda
Ukraine: Winter under pressure as cities struggle with energy shortages
The Humanitarian Impact of Escalating Hostilities between Afghanistan and Pakistan
A Statement by Regional Directors of 14 International NGOs in the Middle East
Protection reports: Colombia
Desplazados por la violencia criminal: la crisis humanitaria invisible en América Latina
7 cosas que debe saber sobre el desplazamiento en América Latina