by: KIRSTEN GRIESHABER, Associated Press Posted: Mar 28, 2022 / 01:44 AM CDT Updated: Mar 28, 2022 / 01:55 AM CDT SHARE FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — When the bombs started falling on Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, last month, Tatyana Zhuravliova had a horrible deja vu: the 83-year-old Ukrainian Jew felt the same panic she suffered as a little girl when the Nazis were flying air attacks on her hometown of Odesa. “My whole body was shaking, and those fears crept up again through my entire body — fears which I didn’t even know were still hidden inside me,” Zhuravliova said. Her...