What most who walk past — or sit down to play — don’t appear to realize is that Yezhova hasn’t lost a single game in the 10 days that she’s been out here. If she weren’t raising money for a good cause she could be accused of being a hustler, since the 10-year-old is actually the world champion for her age in checkers, also known as draughts, having won the title last summer.
“Valeria asked me how she could help the Ukrainian army,” says Yezhova’s mother Liubov, who is standing off to the side with Victor Kovalenko, the man who has coached Yezhova in checkers since she was seven. “I asked her what she does best, she replied that she is good at checkers. That’s how this idea came about.”
“Good at checkers” means dispatching with her street opponents in minutes, never hesitating as she mercilessly takes black pieces off the board as her white pieces advance. The defeated challengers — kids, women and men of all ages — drop however much they like into the box and, increasingly, ask Yezhova for a picture thanks to her growing national notoriety.
‘Already a legend’
After spending over a week outside the shopping center Yezhova had raised the equivalent of $700. She decided to donate the money to a foundation run by celebrity activist Serhiy Prytula, who has been raising money to buy humanitarian aid and equipment for the Ukrainian military. An online video shows Prytula choking up when Yezhova presents him with the stacks of bills.
The moment spread quickly on the internet and very soon people were writing on Yezhova’s mother’s Facebook page, asking where they would be so they could play the young phenomenon.
“Valeria is already a legend here,” said Dmitro Penzev, after losing his game. His wife had spotted Yezhova at the shopping center and called Penzev who rushed over from work. “You would rather lose to her, she is doing a great job helping the Ukrainian army. She has probably touched the whole of Ukraine.”
Word has already reached the front line; a woman who saw Yezhova showed her a photo of her husband’s unit thanking Yezhova for what she’s doing for them.
“It was a strange feeling,” Yezhova said. “I guess I felt gratitude to the military that they protect us and despite the fact that I do much less than them they want to thank me.”
As Yezhova played, a store security guard came out to say air raid sirens were sounding elsewhere in the city and they were temporarily closing the doors for safety.
“Of course I would like to live a normal life, but during the war it is difficult,” she said. “This is an unpleasant feeling, there are a lot of negative emotions.”
Yezhova’s family spent the first week of the war in a school basement as Russian forces occupied a neighborhood outside Kyiv where her grandparents live. They fled to the western city of Lviv as the fighting intensified but eventually returned to the capital.
‘Great example’
She is both the European and world champion for her age group, the under-10s. Next month she will return to Turkey for the European youth championship but this time doesn’t expect to do as well since she’ll be facing players up to 13 years old.
On this 10th day of sitting at her folding table Yezhova takes a moment to count the cash after just over an hour and a half of play. It’s almost $150, a record haul, which will soon go to the Serhiy Prytula Foundation.
But before she leaves for the day, 18-year-old Mykola Sorokin asks for a game. They play two, each as uneventful as all the others that proceeded that day.
“These children are a great example of how we can help each other, a good example that Russia can’t beat us,” he says after his loss. Running into Yezhova was a “dream come true,” he adds, and in terms of skill “I’m the ground and she’s the sky.”