His eyes filled with tears as he recalled how he hid under the World War II bomb table and finally fled with his mother to Kazakhstan when the Nazis and their minions began massacring tens of thousands of Jews in Odessa. VISIT POLAND, UKRAINE BORDER: RUSSIAN INVASION INSPIRING ACTS OF COMPASSION AND COURAGE “Now I’m too old to run to the bunker. So I stayed in my apartment and prayed that the bombs wouldn’t kill me,” Zhuravliova, a retired doctor, told The Associated Press on Sunday. But as the Russian military’s attacks on Ukraine have become even more brutal and...