It is a measure of how war has evolved that the destruction of a cathedral no longer shocks us. We have become accustomed to the rubble, the dust, the hollowed-out shells of buildings that once held centuries of faith. But when President Zelenskyy confirmed that a historic cathedral in eastern Ukraine had been hit by Russian forces, the world paused. This was not just another building. It was a repository of memory, a place where generations had baptised their children, mourned their dead, and sought solace. And now it is a scar on the landscape, a deliberate strike at the heart of Ukrainian identity.
The British government responded with characteristic speed. Within hours, the Prime Minister announced a £500m cultural restoration fund, earmarked specifically for the repair of damaged heritage sites across Ukraine. On the surface, this is a generous offer. But what does it actually mean? Five hundred million pounds is a fortune, yet it feels like a drop in the ocean when you consider the scale of destruction. More importantly, what does this gesture say about our own anxieties? We are funding the preservation of a culture that we fear is being erased. We are trying to shore up the past against a present that seems intent on obliterating it.
I spoke to Olena, a historian who fled Kyiv with her two children. She now lives in a housing estate in Manchester, working as a cleaner. When I told her about the fund, she wept. Not with joy, but with a complicated grief. ‘They are trying to kill our memory,’ she said. ‘But memory cannot be rebuilt with money. It is in the people, not the stone.’ Her point is a painful one. While the cathedral’s walls can be reconstructed, the congregation that prayed there is scattered, traumatised, or dead. A restored cathedral without its community is a museum piece, not a living church.
Yet there is something deeply human about our desire to fix what is broken. We pour money into heritage because it gives us a sense of control. If we can restore the physical symbols of a nation, we can pretend that the social fabric is also intact. This is a comforting fiction. The real cultural work will be harder: healing the divisions that this war has carved into families and neighbourhoods. The £500m fund may rebuild stone arches and golden domes, but it cannot rebuild trust. That will take generations.
For now, the cathedral lies in ruins. The photographs are stark: a ceiling open to the sky, icons blackened by smoke, a single candle still burning among the debris. It is a powerful image, and the government knows it. The pledge is as much about signalling solidarity to the British public as it is about helping Ukraine. We want to see ourselves as defenders of civilisation, of the shared European heritage that Putin seems so determined to destroy. The irony, of course, is that our own cathedrals are struggling, their congregations dwindling, their roofs leaking. But that is a domestic crisis for another day.
On the streets of London, the reaction is muted. People are sympathetic, but distracted by the cost of living, by strikes, by the relentless drip of bad news. The cathedral feels very far away. Yet in a quiet corner of a suburban home, Olena is scrolling through old photographs on her phone. ‘This is my grandfather,’ she says, pointing to a man standing proudly in front of the cathedral. ‘He helped rebuild it after the last war. Now my children will never see it.’ She turns off the screen. The room is silent. And I am reminded that the real cost of war is not measured in billions, but in these small, irreplaceable moments of loss.









