A bar in Odessa, Ukraine (Photos by Sónia Almeida)
In one of Odessa's trendy bars I meet Ana and her husband Nikita, who are acting as translators for Quan and his prospective wife Tanya. Originally from Chile, Quan tells me he lives in New Jersey and wants to marry a Ukrainian woman because "she'll be poor and easier to manage".Shockingly, the Chilean charmer fails to impress the markedly younger Tanya, who leaves in a taxi after spending the evening staring at the floor. The same scenario is played out all over the city, with older men salivating over young women. The people really winning are agents like Ana and Nikita, who have wrangled a corner of the country's marriage agency market.The average Ukrainian marriage agency will charge $30 (£25) to send a "small but beautiful" cake to a lady. They'll also send her "15 beautiful roses for $100 [£30]", which is a pretty decent mark up when you think the same cake costs $5 (£4) and the roses $30. You can also get a "custom photo shoot of your lady" in a location of your choice (and, creepily, wearing the outfit of your choice) for about $200.The marriage agency business is big money in a country where the average salary plummeted to less than $250 during the war, and unsurprisingly can leave men feeling exploited. Translators, agents and "potential brides" run scams throughout the city, emptying men's wallets as they go.Over in Mick O'Neill's Irish bar – home to Odessa's expats – I meet 52-year-old George Perry, a dentist from New York who just got engaged to his third Ukrainian wife. The psytrance fanatic brought me over a slice of his homemade pumpkin pie before filling me in on his complicated love life.
Advertisement
An advert for a strip show
Advertisement
Advertisement