-
Knicks sweep Cavs to reach first NBA Finals since 1999
-
Sonny Rollins, last jazz 'colossus,' dead at 95
-
Miserly Arsenal face PSG firepower in Champions League style clash
-
Brazil's World Cup challenge faces Morocco test in Group C
-
Panatta hopes Sinner can overcome 50 years of history at Roland Garros
-
'I think twice': Minorities fear World Cup immigration enforcement
-
Son of Libya's Haftar vows to make up for 'lost years' under Gaddafi
-
Cleaning the chakras of Ecuador's cats and dogs
-
Chile's once-dirty Mapocho river enjoys new lease on life
-
Rubio to revive 'Quad' alliance in India, but staying power unclear
-
War-hardened Kyiv residents return to routine after Russian strikes
-
US attacks missile sites in Iran, despite ceasefire
-
IS-linked group set to return to Australia, minister says
-
SCANDIC COIN: BingX, BitMart, L-Bank और Biconomy पर लॉन्च किया गया विनियमित वास्तविक-विश्व-संपत्ति प्रोजेक्ट
-
Canada's Carney calls treatment of Gaza flotilla activists 'unacceptable'
-
Messi diagnosed with left hamstring fatigue, return plan uncertain
-
SNC Scandic Coin:規制対象の実物資産プロジェクトがBingX、BitMart、L-Bank、Biconomyでローンチ
-
SNC Scandic Coin: проект на основі реальних активів, що підлягає регулюванню, запущений на біржах BingX, BitMart, L-Bank та Biconomy
-
SNC Scandic Coin: проект, основанный на реальных активах и подпадающий под регулирование, запущен на биржах BingX, BitMart, L-Bank и Biconomy
-
SNC Scandic Coin:受監管的實物資產項目於 BingX、BitMart、L-Bank 及 Biconomy 正式上線
-
Rosenqvist takes $4.34 mln from record $30 mln Indy 500 purse
-
Valiant Monfils loses in first round on Roland Garros farewell
-
SNC 스칸딕 코인: 규제 준수 실물 자산 프로젝트, BingX, BitMart, L-Bank 및 Biconomy에 상장
-
FIFA reveals 48 World Cup team base training sites
-
SNC স্ক্যান্ডিক কয়েন: নিয়ন্ত্রিত বাস্তব-জগৎ সম্পদ প্রকল্প BingX, BitMart, L-Bank এবং Biconomy-এ চালু
-
Paderborn strike late to relegate Wolfsburg from Bundesliga
-
SNC Scandic Coin: Regulated real‑world‑asset project launched on BingX, BitMart, L‑Bank and Biconomy
-
Guardiola saluted by Michael Jordan at Man City farewell party
-
Canada PM compares 'dangerous' Alberta separatist bid to Brexit
-
Israel strikes southern Lebanon as far-right ministers call for escalation
-
Bolivian leader to slash own salary by 50% in gesture to protesters
-
Man Utd's Fernandes hits back at Keane over 'lie'
-
Lille part ways with coach Genesio
-
Leftist icon, millionaire lawyer, conservative senator: Who will be Colombia's next leader?
-
California chemical tank explosion threat 'eliminated,' official says
-
AC Milan sack coach Allegri after 'unequivocal' Champions League failure
-
'So much love': Wawrinka bids adieu to Roland Garros
-
AC Milan sack coach Allegri after Champions League failure
-
Brazil's Lula starts radiotherapy after removal of skin lesion
-
WHO urges DRCongo's neighbours to act immediately on Ebola risk
-
Migrants step up to support community in war-hit Beirut
-
De Zerbi 'passion' saved Spurs from relegation says Maddison
-
Heat dome over Europe scorches UK, France, Spain
-
Chelsea's poor discipline is a 'problem': McFarlane
-
Oil drops below $100 on hopes of US-Iran deal to open Hormuz
-
Philippines ends rescue operation for 12 missing in building collapse
-
Dupont, Capuozzo returns hand Toulouse Top 14 run-in boost
-
Russia threatens more strikes on Kyiv, urges foreigners to leave city
-
Trump links normalizing ties with Israel to Iran peace deal
-
Swiatek, Rybakina cruise through Roland Garros openers
Polish school offers Ukraine teens 'semblance of normalcy'
Stuck to the door of one Warsaw high school is the sign "Laskavo prosimo do shkoli", or "Welcome to school" in Ukrainian, along with the flags of Poland and Ukraine.
Chattering in Russian and Ukrainian, teenagers who have just fled their wartorn homeland use magnetic key cards to enter and are welcomed again with a large yellow-blue flag and the slogan "Slava Ukraini" or "Glory to Ukraine".
It is their first day of school in Poland, where the 13- to 15-year-olds have sought shelter since Russia invaded their country.
Divided into two groups of 20, they are greeted by their new teacher, who shuttles from one classroom to the other throughout the lesson.
From the Ukrainian city of Lviv, a refugee just like them, Mariana Druchek, lays out the plan for the day and passes out a maths test.
"Uh oh," comes the response. Viktoria, 16, and 15-year-olds Polina and Zoriana are in a panic.
"It's on things we covered three years ago, in grade eight -- I forgot it all," said Viktoria, to which the others chime in with "same".
But they relax soon enough. By break time, they are all smiles, saying the atmosphere is "really good" and "positive" and "the class and school in general are all right".
It is as if their mad dash out of Kyiv with barely any luggage -- to the backdrop of bombs and blasts -- was already fading somewhat into the distance.
But the sense of danger is still there.
"We're afraid the Russians will even make their way over here, because everything is possible," Viktoria told AFP.
- 'Education and peace' -
Limanowski High School has been able to accommodate the new students and hire new teachers thanks to funding from the mayor's office.
On day one, Renata Kozlowska, a city official for the school's neighbourhood of Zoliborz, came to welcome the teenagers.
She told them that "all of Poland is with you" and stressed that they have the right to "an education and peace".
The teenagers -- who come from various cities, including Kyiv, Zhytomyr, Lutsk and Ivano-Frankivsk -- will follow a pared-down version of Poland's curriculum, including English, Polish, history, maths, physics and gym.
The classes will be taught by Ukrainian teachers who themselves had fled the war, with a bilingual educator at the helm of each group.
"What's most important is to offer them some semblance of normalcy and quiet," the school's principal Andrzej Wyrozembski told AFP.
Druchek, who crossed into Poland with her three children just after the invasion, agrees.
"It's not a matter of maintaining their knowledge levels, but to make sure they have psychological support and friends, that they know that everyone wants to help," she said.
- 54,000 Ukrainians enrolled -
Janusz, a Polish student at Limanowski, said he is all for the initiative, calling it "cool" to have welcomed the Ukrainians into their school.
"It means they can keep going to school and won't be thinking non-stop about what's going on in Ukraine," he added.
While the new students will be attending separate classes from their Polish counterparts, the school is keen on helping them integrate.
Each Ukrainian will be partnered up with a Pole their age to join for after-school activities and the like.
Limanowski is the first school in town to have launched such a programme, but others are due to follow soon.
Wyrozembski stressed that it was his teachers who took the lead on the initiative once refugees began flooding Poland.
But he too had his reasons to get involved: when Nazi Germany attacked Poland in September 1939, his father fled Warsaw for Lviv, which was a Polish city at the time.
Since the invasion began, nearly 54,000 Ukrainian children have been enrolled in Polish schools, Education Minister Przemyslaw Czarnek said Wednesday.
For Wyrozembski, the most important thing now would be to set up special schools for Ukrainian students aged 16 and 17, who would normally be preparing for a final exam before college.
Were they to switch to the Polish curriculum now and prepare for the equivalent testing here, it would "put them back three or four years," he said.
O.M.Souza--AMWN