10Кві2026
Розуміємо права людини Мережа домів прав людини

контакти

Провулок Луговий, 1 Г,
с. Количівка,
Чернігівський район,

Чернігівська область,
Україна 
15563

+38 0462 930-907
+38 0949 881-907

Позначка: war in ukraine

ПАКУЛЬ
ДокументуванняНовини

Occupation of the Pakul village

Robbing the local population, plundering the school, detention and torture. The commander sentenced. Briefly on how the Pakul village  residents survived 10 days of Russian occupation.

Who occupied Pakul?

Pakul is an ancient picturesque village in Chernihiv region, located only 10 km away from the Belarus border. Russian troops managed to occupy it nearly a month after the start of the full-scale invasion. The occupation lasted 10 days.

Armen Abgharian (in the middle). Photo: Chernihiv Time (Chas Chernihivskyi).

On the morning of March 21, 2022, servicepeople of the Russian 7th Composite Rifle Company (74th Separate Motorized Brigade) occupied Pakul. The unit was commanded by Armen Abgharyan, a war criminal . The permanent location of the unit is a town of Yurga, Kemerovo region. It was from there that they came to “liberate”, rob and torture the Ukrainian civilian population. Local residents say that the Russian “SOBR” (special rapid response unit) and other Russian Federation military formations were also stationed in the village.

They robbed and looked for “sauna with girls”

Several checkpoints were immediately set up in the village. Russian soldiers of Asian appearance, probably Tuvans or Buryats, were detailed to the checkpoint in the village center. They asked local residents where to find a “sauna with girls”. This terrified the residents of the Pakul as these soldiers posed a potential threat to the women and girls who remained in the occupation. Fortunately, no cases of rape were recorded.

The Russian soldiers were quartered in empty civilian houses, as well as in the premises of the school, forestry and fire department. After they had left the village, it was found that tools  from the school garage were missing. Cooking utensils and all food supplies  from the dining room were missing as well. New mats were taken from the school gym. Farm equipment, cars and trucks, livestock, poultry, food, household items and even underwear were stolen from local residents.

School premises in the village of Pakul. Photo: Education Human Rights House  — Chernihiv.

Inspections and torture

The Pakul residents were searched, every house was checked, phones and documents were inspected at roadblocks. On March 24, 2022, a local resident, Oleg Parasiuk, was detained when going through the checkpoint (he went to feed the dogs). First, russian soldiers interrogated him, then they took him to their headquarters located within the forestry facilities. Oleg was kept in the basement together with another man – Serhii Yakovenko from the village of Vediltsi.

Both prisoners were required to provide information about the Armed Forces of Ukraine. The men were beaten, but they did not tell anything. The next day, Armen Abgharyan, the unit commander,  went down to the basement. He unbuckled his holster, took out a pistol and shot twice at Oleg Parasyuk and three times at Serhii Yakovenko… Oleg Parasyuk’s arm and leg were wounded. Serhii Yakovenko received a shoulder, cheek, upper and lower lip  injuries, and lost five teeth. The men survived and were able to escape, as the basement door had been left unlocked.

In addition, it is known about at least three more people detained in the premises of the forestry.

Basement in the premises of the forestry in the village of Pakul. Photo: Educational House of Human Rights — Chernihiv.

On March 31, 2022, local residents saw a military convoy moving towards Chernihiv. Russian troops were leaving the village, leaving chaos and explosive ordnance behind them…

Journalists managed to identify Abgharian, so law enforcement agencies initiated criminal proceedings. It is known that Russian military personnel from this motorized brigade have been participating in the war against Ukraine since 2014. On September 14, 2023, the court in Chernihiv handed down a sentence and found a Russian serviceperson, Armen Abgharian, the commander of the 74th separate motorized brigade, guilty of ill-treatment of civilian population as well as of giving orders to violate the laws and customs of war. Abgharian was sentenced to 12 years in prison in absentia.


This publication is made possible by the generous support of the American people through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in the framework of the Human Rights in Action Program implemented by Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union.

Opinions, conclusions and recommendations presented in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID, the United States Government. The contents are the responsibility of the authors.

USAID is the world’s premier international development agency and a catalytic actor driving development results. USAID’s work demonstrates American generosity, and promotes a path to recipient self-reliance and resilience, and advances U.S. national security and economic prosperity. USAID has partnered with Ukraine since 1992, providing more than $9 billion in assistance. USAID’s current strategic priorities include strengthening democracy and good governance, promoting economic development and energy security, improving health care systems, and mitigating the effects of the conflict in the east. For additional information about USAID in Ukraine, please call USAID’s Development Outreach and Communications Office at: +38 (044) 521-5753. You may also visit our website: http://www.usaid.gov/ukraine or our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/USAIDUkraine.

All images in this material were created using artificial intelligence and are purely illustrative.

Окупація села Левковичі (1)
ДокументуванняНовини

The Killed Civilians and the Open-Air Crematorium: How a Village in Chernihiv Region Survived Occupation

Atrocities of Russian troops during the occupation of a village in Chernihiv region: torture and execution of civilians, burning bodies in plain sight, and shelling civilian homes.

The spring of 2022 marked the beginning of tragedy for one village in the Chernihiv region. On that fateful morning, locals were startled by the frantic screams of a mother, echoing for kilometers. Gathering at the village’s central cross, they found the snow-covered bodies of four of their fellow villagers lying in a row. In a state of shock and deep sorrow, relatives used carts and sleds to transport the deceased, burying them in their own yards until better times…

This is the story of crimes committed by Russian soldiers in one of the villages in Chernihiv region. It is told from the testimonies of eyewitnesses, documented by representatives of the Human Rights House – Chernihiv.

Names of the deceased and their relatives have been changed.

Torture and execution of four civilian men

On February 24, 2022, villagers learned of the war’s onset from televisions and calls from loved ones. Later, they heard explosions outside the village. On February 27, Russian military vehicles rumbled through the village streets. The following day, Russian soldiers brutally killed four local men, marking the beginning of the village’s occupation, which lasted a month.

On the eve of March 1, 2022, at least four families stayed awake all night, their men not returning home. Until 7-8 in the morning, each family held onto hope, thinking they might have been delayed due to the occupation, spending the night with friends.

This hope dissipated for Petro first. Early in the morning, he went to search for his son Roman. He walked about a hundred meters from his home to the village’s central cross and saw the bodies of four men. Petro’s heart raced with dread; inside, everything churned with anticipation of impending tragedy. With great difficulty, he approached closer: among the dead was his 33-year-old son.

The tragedy reached Roman’s mother next. The woman collapsed near the cross, wiping the snow from her son’s face and screaming, “My son!!! For what???”. People heard this wild, inconsolable cry of a mother who lost her child from a kilometer away.

Katerina learned of her husband’s death, 34-year-old Stepan, next. Following her, Paulina was wounded by the news of her husband’s murder, 46-year-old Maxim. Julia came to collect her father’s body, 51-year-old Victor, with sleds, the last to know. She lived farthest from the center.

People transported the bodies of the slain to their homes and, as best they could, prepared them for burial. Thus, on the first day of spring, Stepan found his resting place in the garden, where he had planned to plow with his brand-new tractor that year. Maxim was buried beneath the window of the house he loved so much. And Roman – in the orchard, where as a child he loved to taste apples and cherries. Only Julia managed to bury her father in the cemetery: she lacked the strength to bring him home herself, but acquaintances helped her bury him in the cemetery.

Russian soldiers tortured all four unarmed villagers. Their bodies bore gunshot wounds to the genitals and legs, massive bruises, gun and stab wounds.

Murder of civilians and deaths due to lack of medication

On March 11th, the village came under shelling. Homes, streets, and most importantly, people, were affected.

“Uncle Vitya, save dad! Grandma is already dead,”

– with these words, a terrified girl ran to her neighbor.

That day, her grandmother Olena and grandfather Mykita from her father’s side were killed in the shelling. The husband had just come to bring things when a shell hit. Mykita died on the spot. Olena groaned for half an hour: her leg was torn off, so she slowly bled out and died. To alleviate her suffering in any way, the rural paramedic injected painkillers when she could reach the scene.

The son of the landlady, Mykola, also suffered a severe leg injury. But the man survived. He was taken to a neighbor who once served in the navy and knew the basics of first aid. He advised Mykola’s wife to pack the wound to stop the bleeding.

And you know, she packed that wound. Her father was just killed, her mother-in-law died… But she gathered herself and managed to organize conditions for her husband to survive. Luckily, the paramedic had antibiotics. She injected them into the wounded man, so his condition stabilized. After the village was liberated, he was treated in Ukraine and abroad,” says a neighbor of the family who witnessed the events.

However, six villagers did not survive the occupation: they died due to a lack of specific medications and proper medical care. Among the deceased was the father of the tortured Stepan – Mykhailo. These people were also buried in their own yards.

“Open-air crematorium”

The battles for Chernihiv region lasted from February 24th to March 31st. The enemy repeatedly tried to take Chernihiv and was met with resistance. In many occupied villages, people provided coordinates of enemy equipment and locations of Russian troops. Based on this information, the Ukrainian Armed Forces struck. Consequently, the enemy suffered considerable losses.

Many villagers testify that Russian soldiers burned the bodies of their own soldiers. This happened on the territory of a destroyed grain storage.

According to locals, Russian soldiers transported the bodies with ambulances. Then they unloaded them near the demolished grain storage, poured something over them, and set them on fire. They finished off the wounded: villagers heard shots from the side of the storage.

The flames were violet-blue in color. The stench surrounded the area, making it difficult to breathe. This lasted for two days. During this nearly continuous burning, the concrete slabs on the grain storage resembled torn paper.

“In the first two days, the doors of the body trucks were still closed. Later, I saw hands hanging from the sides… The bodies at the farm burned for two days. From the window, I could see two soldiers taking the body, swinging it, and throwing it into the fire. The third one poured something from a bucket, and it burned. Breathing at that time was difficult, there was black smoke,” said a local resident.

Two years have passed. People are returning to normal life. The destroyed farm has been restored and is operating again. At the cross in the center of the village, the Ukrainian flag flies proudly, and a memorial plaque with the names of the slain villagers stands firmly. It serves as a reminder of the war crimes committed by Russian occupiers here…


The material was prepared by Natalia Naidiuk.

This publication is made possible by the generous support of the American people through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in the framework of the Human Rights in Action Program implemented by Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union.

Opinions, conclusions and recommendations presented in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID, the United States Government. The contents are the responsibility of the authors.

USAID is the world’s premier international development agency and a catalytic actor driving development results. USAID’s work demonstrates American generosity, and promotes a path to recipient self-reliance and resilience, and advances U.S. national security and economic prosperity. USAID has partnered with Ukraine since 1992, providing more than $9 billion in assistance. USAID’s current strategic priorities include strengthening democracy and good governance, promoting economic development and energy security, improving health care systems, and mitigating the effects of the conflict in the east. For additional information about USAID in Ukraine, please call USAID’s Development Outreach and Communications Office at: +38 (044) 521-5753. You may also visit our website: http://www.usaid.gov/ukraine or our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/USAIDUkraine.

All images in this material were created using artificial intelligence and are purely illustrative.

 

Окупація села Левковичі (2)
ДокументуванняНовини

Occupation of Levonky village

Levonky is a small village located in the Chernihiv region, about 25 kilometers from the regional center. About a hundred people live here, and the only one of its kind in Ukraine, the “Regional Center for Social Adaptation,” is located here. It was created mainly for people without a permanent place of residence.

On March 30, 2022, two columns of Russian military vehicles entered the village. On the way, they shot the transformer, immediately cutting off the electricity. After arriving in the village, Russian soldiers selected six local men for work and forced them to saw fallen trees that blocked the bridge over the river. They began conducting searches, trying to find Ukrainian soldiers and those who blocked their path.

“Pray, because your life is over…”

The men sawed the trees and returned. About 20 minutes later, Russian soldiers came back to the houses and took them, leading them to the territory of the Center for Social Adaptation. They took phones from everyone and interrogated them.

The soldiers took the men to the courtyard, made them kneel down, and tied their hands with ropes. They fired shots in different directions, threatening to shoot them. They told one of them, “Pray, because your life is over, we will kill you now, don’t worry—it will be quick.” Then they brought his father and also interrogated and fired shots over his head. Another local resident was beaten, and they threatened to deal with his family.

Later, the Russians took everyone to another room. There was a cage where the men were placed. They had guards and sometimes the commander visited. The men managed to escape only when the Russian military left the village.

Plundering and Destruction

Russian soldiers did not bypass the Center for Social Adaptation and stayed there for a day. They spent the night in a building that the staff used as a warehouse. They stole equipment, mattresses, pillows, dishes, and chairs. They left a mess. Russian soldiers even took things from a second-hand store that were brought here as humanitarian aid. Moreover, they shot two cows from the farm, which were taken care of by the center’s wards.

They looted the houses of local residents, taking whatever they liked. In one cellar, they threw a grenade. Moreover, in the village, Russian soldiers were often seen in a state of drunkenness.

 

The inscription left by Russian soldiers in the village club: “Forgive us, we came for the Bandera supporters. And there are looters among everyone :)”. Photo provided by witnesses.

Tank with an Explosive Before leaving the village, the wards of the Center were locked in a separate room. Witnesses said that meanwhile, Russian soldiers looted, poured fuel into one of the tanks, set it on fire, and closed the hatch. It burned for about an hour, and then exploded with such force that the tank’s caterpillar flew over the roof, it was found about 150 meters from the explosion site. Another piece of iron buried in the ground damaged the main water pipeline. The utility building collapsed nearby. The tank wheel pierced the trunk of a century-old tree, which fell. Nearby houses were damaged, the ceiling collapsed at the Center for Social Adaptation, windows were smashed, and so on. People managed to get out and put out the fire.

Volunteering

Since the beginning of the full-scale invasion, the wards and employees of the Chernihiv Regional Center for Social Adaptation have been engaged in volunteering. They fed people in Chernihiv who were in bomb shelters with milk from the Levonka farm and other products. They delivered supplies to the blockaded city 25 kilometers away, even during shelling.

Even in just a few days of occupation, local residents were able to experience firsthand what “Russian world” is and how they could help others.


The preparation of informational materials became possible thanks to the Human Rights in Action Program, implemented by the Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union with the support of #USAID. The views and interpretations presented here do not necessarily reflect the views of the US government, USAID, or #UHHRU. The authors and UHHRU are solely responsible for the content of the publication.

Окупація села Левковичі (1)
ДокументуванняНовини

Occupation of the village of Levkovichi

On February 28, 2022, the first column of Russian troops passed through the village of Levkovychi in Chernihiv region, starting an occupation that lasted just over a month. During this period, the Russians brutally killed local residents, detained and tortured them. People also died from shelling and lack of medicine. Houses in the village were damaged and looted.

On January 5, our documentarians visited Levkovychi and recorded evidence of war crimes committed in February-March 2022.

Russian soldiers shot dead four men: Oleksandr Orishko, Oleksandr Derkach, Yaroslav Varava, and Serhiy Nemchenko. Local residents heard gunfire, and later their fellow villagers found them dead. The bodies had numerous gunshot and stab wounds, as well as signs of beating. The men were tortured by Russian soldiers and then killed. The bodies of the deceased were found in the center of the village, right next to the cross. It is known that the men were preparing Molotov cocktails to stop columns of Russian troops, but they had no weapons. Their lives were cut short on the first day of the occupation.

The man who walked from Slavutych to Levkovychi was detained and taken prisoner. The Russians decided to make him a “messenger.” To make him agree, they tortured him, cutting crosses with a knife where tattoos were on his arms and legs. To prevent him from escaping, they went to his parents’ house and took his father hostage. The man was sent to Slavutych to deliver a letter to local authorities. What was written there is unknown, as there was no opportunity to see.

Witnesses who agreed to be interviewed spoke of looting by Russian soldiers. They looted uninhabited houses, and where people lived, they entered and took food, cars, livestock, and even underwear. Shops and the village council were also looted. Local farmers also suffered from abuses by Russian soldiers. Agricultural machinery on a farm in the village was destroyed and shot at. Russian army soldiers used fuel stocks prepared by the farmer for sowing and destroyed grain stocks.

Знищене зерносховище у селі Левковичі

There are many damaged houses in the village, with about 150 of them having damage. They suffered not only from shelling but also from Russian soldiers placing vehicles near houses and firing at Chernihiv. Two people died from shelling. These are Sotnyk Vitaliy and Tovkun Nina. Nina’s son, Oleg Tovkun, was injured and is still undergoing rehabilitation abroad.

The residents of Levkovychi lived in constant fear during the occupation. Civilians were threatened with death, for example, for violating the order not to look towards Russian soldiers or for refusing to accept food under the guise of humanitarian aid. They were forbidden to walk around the village or talk to each other. Living conditions in the occupation were also complicated by the lack of electricity, gas, communication, and especially medicine. In these conditions, six elderly people died in the village.

This continued until April 3, 2022, the day Levkovychi was liberated.


The preparation of this informational material was made possible thanks to the Human Rights in Action Program, implemented by the Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union with the support of #USAID. The views and interpretations presented here do not necessarily reflect the views of the US Government, USAID, or #UHHRU. The authors and Educational Human Rights House – Chernihiv are solely responsible for the content of the publication.

 

Сумщина
ДокументуванняНовини

Destroyed Schools in Sumy Region: The Story of 16 Educational Institutions

A few kilometers before the Russian border in Sumy Oblast stood a school that was over 100 years old. It was beautiful, with thick walls, intricate decoration, and equipped according to the standards of the New Ukrainian School. Approximately 80 students from grades 1 to 4 studied there. Now, these Ukrainian children no longer have a school – it was destroyed by Russia. This educational institution “survived” the First and Second World Wars, but unfortunately, not the barbarism of the Russian Federation.

On March 24, 2023, Russian occupiers dropped a 500-kilogram guided aerial bomb on Bilopillia Gymnasium No. 4. The impact was so powerful that only a pile of bricks remained of the institution. The iron rails, once laid during construction, became lodged in the ground from the shockwave. They could only be extracted with the help of special equipment. Unfortunately, on that day, a security guard who was in the school during the shelling lost his life. The institution is completely ruined and is beyond restoration.

Bilopyllia Gymnasium 4

The story of Bilopillia Gymnasium No. 4 is not the only attack by Russian soldiers on educational institutions in Sumy Oblast. During a monitoring mission as part of the project “Education Under Fire (Kherson and Sumy regions),” our documentation team recorded dozens of attacks on educational facilities. Here’s what we managed to see and document.

On 24.02.22 vs. 24.03.23 in Bilopillia

Many Ukrainians recall with horror the morning of February 24, 2022. However, the residents of Bilopillia remember the morning of March 23, 2023, even more vividly. On that day, Russians heavily shelled the entire city: there was an aerial strike, shelling from the Grad MLRS, and small arms artillery fire.

Tactical aviation took off from two Russian airfields in Morozovsk and Akhtubinsk. Ten Su-35 fighters launched 11 (from other sources, 10) guided aerial bombs and one Kh-31P missile over the Sumy region.

On that day, a police inspector and a gymnasium guard lost their lives, while 9 citizens were injured. The attacks damaged the buildings of three educational institutions: Bilopillia Gymnasiums No. 3, No. 4, and No. 5.

One of the buildings of Bilopillia Gymnasium No. 4 (Bilopillia City Council), mentioned earlier, was constructed in 1895. This building housed the classrooms for junior classes. It is located approximately 7 km from the border with Russia and a few hundred meters from another gymnasium building where senior classes were taught. This building also suffered from shelling on 23.03.2023 – the shockwave shattered the windows.

Bilopillia Gymnasium No. 3

Bilopillia Gymnasium No. 3 also suffered damages – there, the windows were shattered.

Bilopillia Gymnasium No. 5 was also affected. Since 1959, the institution has functioned as a boarding school. Interestingly, the building that now houses the school has a history dating back to the pre-revolutionary period. In 1908, it was a male gymnasium, and in 1923, it became Labor School No. 1. During the Second World War, the building served as a German military hospital. The structure itself was severely damaged, and the ruins lingered around for a long time.

The Russian invasion added another chapter to the sorrowful history of the institution. After the “visit” on March 23, 2023, the cafeteria was completely destroyed, windows were blown out in the dormitory building, and the roof, walls, and windows of School Building No. 1 were also damaged.

Next to the school, apartment buildings, a store, and the completely ruined building of the Pension Fund were also damaged – a projectile hit the latter. Approximately 200 meters away, there was a police facility hit by an aerial bomb – it too was completely destroyed, and as mentioned earlier, a police officer lost his life there.

Pavlivska Gymnasium: 4 km to the border

Pavlivska Gymnasium of Bilopillia City Council is situated very close to the border with Russia – approximately 4 km away. The school building is quite large, designed for 400 students. However, currently, only 14 children attend, and today this educational institution operates as a branch of Bilopillia Gymnasium.

It’s not surprising given the ongoing shelling of the village from Russian territory: private houses, agricultural enterprises, and more are being destroyed. In such conditions, it is challenging to live, let alone study or work.

Pavlivska Gymnasium

 

Pavlivska Gymnasium was shelled in August 2022, with direct hits occurring. Two projectiles struck the roof, and three more landed in the courtyard. The school building suffered damage from shrapnel and shockwaves, including 15% of the asbestos roofing being damaged, windows and doors being shattered, and property inside some classrooms being affected. A children’s playground, cafeteria, and private houses near the gymnasium were also damaged due to mortar shelling.

Iskriskivschynske School

The State Vocational and Technical Educational Institution “Iskriskivschynske Vocational and Technical School” is located 2 km from the Russian border. Like many educational institutions in Sumy Oblast, it has a long history – the first building of the school was constructed in 1905. In the past, it trained tractor drivers, cooks, confectioners, agricultural workers, and drivers.

Before the major conflict, around 200 students attended this educational institution. However, its proximity to the border and the Russian invasion hindered its normal functioning.

The Russians targeted the school twice: first in July 2022 and again in August of the same year. Two Russian aircraft, violating the state border near the town of Tyotkino, launched 2 rockets from an altitude of 200 meters.

The targeted impact of the rockets damaged the educational building. The roof was destroyed, the computer lab and gymnasium were ruined, windows and doors throughout the building were shattered. At the point of impact, a section of the wall was blown out, and a fire broke out after the shelling.

Following the second hit, the dormitory burned down. Nearby, the church, post office, water tower, school, store, village council, monument, and private houses also suffered damage.

Sumy Vocational College

Sumy Vocational College of the Sumy National Agrarian University has its origins dating back to 1903 when the Sumy Agricultural School was founded. Since 1997, the institution has been a structural unit of the Sumy National Agrarian University.

Currently, about 500 students are enrolled there, and they could have pursued their studies more effectively were it not for the Russian aggression. The college was attacked on 26.02.2022 around 17:00. One of the projectiles hit a building next to the college and dormitory, causing windows to shatter, doors to be blown out, the sports hall to be damaged, and the structure to be partially destroyed.

Another projectile landed near the dormitory, triggering a fire. At that moment, the dormitory housed two orphaned children, a mother with two boys, and a family with a small child. Fortunately, they were unharmed. The building also had a guard and accounting staff. Overall, as a result of the city shelling that day, three people were injured, and three people lost their lives.

Malovystoropsky Vocational College

Malovystoropsky Vocational College, located in the village of Maly Vystorop, is a separate structural unit named after P.S. Rybalka of the Sumy National Agrarian University. According to the teachers and management of the institution, it is one of those uncommon cases where a vocational college is situated not in a city but in a village. They take pride in this fact and actively contribute to its development.

However, the Russian occupiers had their own plans for the institution. From March 17 to March 25, 2022, the village of Maly Vystorop was occupied by a Russian tank brigade. Of course, they couldn’t overlook the vocational college and began using its premises.

According to witnesses, the administrative staff of the brigade lived in the educational building. This happened despite the fact that even before the village was occupied on March 13, 2022, the institution had already been shelled. According to testimonies, the shelling involved mortars and heavy artillery.

Malovystoropsky Vocational College

The second shelling of the college took place on March 25, 2022, as the occupiers, before leaving the village, targeted it with tank fire.

“Windows were shattered when the mines came to visit us. Five mines landed on the premises of our educational institution. One near the building, and the others: one near our production workshop, one near the educational and production farm, and two on our stadium,” said the deputy director of the college, Igor Dmytrivsky.

In the four-story educational building, 289 windows, doors, and the roof were damaged. Windows were blown out in the two-story sports building, and windows and doors were damaged in the dormitory.

Russian forces stayed in the college for 8 days. As a result, the material and technical base were destroyed, the state-of-the-art laboratory for practical and laboratory work was looted, furniture was smashed, windows and computer equipment were destroyed, and books were burned. In the student dormitory, furniture was vandalized, doors were broken, and a Russian projectile hit one of the rooms.

Oksana, a college employee, shared, “They lived here: in the carpentry workshop, in the building. And then they continued to break the windows. They took a lot away. They looted the cafeteria: pots, forks, spoons, plates. They damaged computers that were here at the time.”

Boromlya: “Dzvinocok” Kindergarten and Lyceum

On February 24, 2022, Russian military forces were actively moving around the village of Boromlya. The occupation of the village began from the outset and lasted almost until the end of March (the village was liberated on March 26, 2022).

On March 3, the Russians dropped several aerial bombs on the territory of Boromlya, resulting in damage to the kindergarten, village council, residential houses, as well as civilian enterprises.

Boromlya: “Dzvinocok” Kindergarten

One of the bombs targeted the boiler room near the “Dzvinocok” Kindergarten of the Boromlya Village Council. The impact was so powerful that only ruins remained of the kindergarten. Fortunately, there were no people in the preschool institution at that time, so there were no casualties.

The lyceum of the Boromlya Village Council also suffered from the Russian invasion. Russian military forces used the lyceum’s premises for their accommodation: canned goods, dry rations, and personal belongings of Russian soldiers were found. They “lived” in the basement and classrooms of the lyceum, wrote nicknames on the walls, and even maintained a duty roster.

 

The lyceum of the Boromlya Village Council

From such a “stay” in the lyceum, several rooms were damaged, windows and doors were broken, the heating system was destroyed, multimedia and computer equipment were damaged, projectors and tablets were stolen. Moreover, Russian military personnel also stole the school bus. Additionally, the occupants even fired shots at the windows that survived. Apparently, according to their logic, schools should not operate in Ukraine.

Zhigaylivska lyceum branch

The village of Zhigaylivka was occupied from February 24 to March 27, 2022. Russian military forces were stationed in the premises of the Zhigaylivska lyceum branch of the Boromlya Village Council. The local House of Culture is also located in this building. In the classic genre, the invaders robbed the school (and the club): office equipment, including computers, was stolen.

According to witnesses, initially, the military of the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) were based in the village, but then Russian army soldiers entered, including representatives of Asian appearance. Many occupiers were accommodated in the houses of residents who had left, in the premises of the FAP, in the office of the “RAIZ” enterprise, and in the premises of the village council.

Notably, in this settlement, there was a case where a Russian soldier was sentenced in absentia for his unlawful actions. The court convicted a Russian military serviceman who robbed civilians during the occupation of the village of Zhigaylivka. The investigation found that in March 2022, four Russian military personnel entered the house of civilians and, threatening them with weapons, demanded all the available cash. To convince civilians of the seriousness of their intentions, the occupiers took a man outside and fired several shots over his head, after which the wife gave the Russian military 1000 hryvnias and 500 euros. Currently, preventive measures have been chosen against the military in absentia in the form of detention, and the investigator has declared him wanted.

Trostyanets: kindergarten “Bilochka”

The “Bilochka” preschool educational institution of the Trostyanetska City Council is located on the outskirts of the town of Trostyanets, near the forest. It was in this forest not far from the kindergarten that the equipment of the occupiers was located.

In early March, Russian soldiers entered the kindergarten: they interrogated the guard, beat him; they searched for valuable items in the building and stole the director’s laptop.

Trostyanets: kindergarten “Bilochka”

Educational Institution in Soldatske

In March 2022, the Russian forces shelled the local educational complex in the village of Soldatske. The complex includes the Soldatske General Secondary Education Institution I-III levels and the preschool educational institution named after M. Gendina of the Trostyanetska City Council. On March 7, the institution came under artillery shelling, and on March 10, it was hit by an aerial bomb.

The projectile hit directly into the roof of the central building, and the aviation bomb fell 70 meters away from the school. As a result, the roof was destroyed, ceilings collapsed, walls cracked, windows and doors were blown out, and the heating and electrical wiring were damaged.

 

Educational Institution in Soldatske

The projectile hit the roof of the central building directly, and an aviation bomb fell 70 meters away from the school. As a result, the roof, ceiling, walls, windows, and doors were destroyed, and the heating and electrical systems were damaged.

Sumy State University

This year, Sumy State University celebrated its 75th anniversary. It is a fairly large institution of higher education that includes educational buildings, campuses, institutes, and faculties.

On March 12, the Russian military aviation dropped five bombs near Sumy State University. According to witnesses, these were guided aviation bombs (KAB 250).

Sumy State University

All the buildings of Sumy State University had shattered glass, with over 100 windows affected. Almost all windows in the university library were shattered by the shockwave. The damage covered an area of about 1240 square meters.

Studenok: Border Area

Studenok is a border settlement in the Sumy region. Like many other cities and villages located near the border with Russia, Studenok is periodically shelled.

In the center of this village, there is the Studenok branch of the communal institution of Esmanka village council, ‘Esmanska Secondary School I-III levels’ in Shostka district of Sumy region, which has also been shelled.

On August 17, 2022, the largest incident occurred with the school. Fire was opened from small arms artillery from the territory of Russia. According to witnesses, there were about 30 hits that day. As a result, the educational institution suffered from shattered windows, damaged facade, and building walls.

‘Esmanska Secondary School I-III levels’

The private sector also had damaged windows and fences. In residential buildings, shell fragments damaged walls. Destruction also occurred in the village’s cultural center, including damage to the power lines.

As the village is located near the border, shelling continues to this day.

Romny: A Black Day for Educators

End of August 2023. Teachers at School No. 8 of the Romny city council in the Sumy region are preparing the school for September 1. There are no military positions near the school. It’s an ordinary day in Romny.

On August 23, 2023, at 09:27, an air alert was announced in the Sumy region due to the threat of several attack UAVs. At that time, school employees were in the school, preparing for the Day of Knowledge. Among them were the director (Prokopenko T.I.), her deputy (Solonenko N.V.), secretary (Kvasha O.I.), history teacher (Yatsura R.V.), teacher of Ukrainian language and literature (Chala O. M.).

The last one was on the first floor, and the others on the second. In addition, there were 20 to 28 school employees on the school grounds, some of them were weaving camouflage nets for the armed forces in the yard. The children were supposed to come at 10 o’clock, but due to the alarm, their arrival was canceled.
During the explosion and collapse of the second floor of the school, the headmistress, her deputy, secretary and history teacher were killed. The bodies were mutilated.

School No. 8 in Romny

The second floor was completely destroyed, the ceiling of the first floor collapsed, walls collapsed, and the ceilings in the classrooms sagged. The entrance to the bomb shelter was blocked by debris. After the explosion, the school is almost entirely ruined and is not subject to restoration.

The story of these educational institutions is an example of how occupiers treat education in Ukraine. They destroy and plunder buildings, kill and injure people, leaving our children without access to education. Therefore, it is crucial for us to document such attacks and reveal the true face of Russia.


The documentation team of the Educational Human Rights House – Chernihiv conducted a monitoring mission and prepared this material as part of the project ‘Education Under Fire” (Kherson and Sumy regions)’ with financial support from the Czech organization People in Need, within the SOS Ukraine initiative

 

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“Additional hours, extra hands, more strength”

Sometimes it happens: you wake up in the morning, and the thought of all the important and useful things you have to do today doesn’t give you wings but hangs on you like a heavy burden. How to deal with it, where to turn, how to help yourself? Let’s talk about this with Irina Nurullina—a volunteer and educator.

When Irina got acquainted with the Educational House of Human Rights in Chernihiv, she, in her words, was in a creative search. In her previous job, she experienced downtime because the institution where she worked was located in the occupied left bank of Kherson region. Now she holds the position of deputy director of educational work at Kherson Multidisciplinary Gymnasium No. 20 named after Boris Lavrenyov of the Kherson City Council. In addition, she is the curator of the commission on culture and spiritual development of the city student parliament, which operates under the education department of the Kherson City Council.

Irina is an internally displaced person.

“I live in Odessa, which welcomes quite warmly and friendly. I felt that it is indeed an Odessa-mom: sheltering, protecting, caring. But life on the shores of the Black Sea during the war is still a challenge. However, the climate reminds me of my native Kherson, so I feel relatively comfortable here.”

Since 2016, Irina has been volunteering for the Ukrainian Red Cross Society. At that time, she worked as an educator-organizer at Zelenivska Secondary School No. 38 and coordinated the activities of the student self-government and children’s volunteer group. Together with the students, they collected aid for those who needed it most: families with IDP status from Luhansk and Donetsk regions, children from social categories, labor and war veterans. They collected stationery, clothing, personal hygiene items, and food products. As part of the “Apple” campaign, they gathered apples and donated them to kindergartens, residents of boarding schools, veterans’ councils, and the Culture House in the town of Zelenivka, where grandmothers singing in the “Veselka” ensemble were located.

We treated grandmothers with apples, and they, in turn, treated us with candies and pastries for tea.

Thanks to her fruitful volunteer work, in May 2020, Irina became the laureate of the regional competition “Charitable Kherson-2019” and secured the third place in the category of “Philanthropist of the Year.” Since April 2021, she has been a blood donor, actively donating blood in Kherson even during the occupation and continues to do so after moving to Odessa.

She marked the first anniversary of Kherson’s liberation at the Odessa Regional Blood Transfusion Station. “My blood is fighting for Kherson today!”

Irina spent half a year in occupation and dared to leave Kherson only in September 2022. Settling in Odessa, no matter how hospitable it was, was not easy. Still, her desire to be useful helped her adapt to the new place and find a cause close to her heart.

“I sent a request to the Universe: I want to be useful”

And the Universe responded: soon, a volunteer initiative was found that Irina could join.

“A warm company of women from Kherson, local volunteers from Odessa, and others…”

Together, they gather to weave camouflage nets and create other items for the needs of the front—mattresses, rugs, pillows, and talismans: keychains, motanka dolls, and little angels.

It’s not always easy to dedicate as much time to volunteering as one would like, but Irina tries to devote every free day to important causes. She admits that with two jobs and a pile of responsibilities, there isn’t much time left for volunteering, and the realization of this is painful and uncomfortable.

There’s a desire for additional hours, extra hands, and more strength

However, it’s crucial to understand: helping others begins with helping oneself. Irina is learning to acknowledge her own state: when the workload increases and it becomes difficult to wake up due to fatigue and stress, it’s essential to take a break.

“Take a day off, stay at home with a book, because when you’re tired and drained, you won’t be able to help the guys and girls on the front lines.”

How to understand when it’s time to take a break? When you wake up without the desire. When you realize that you’re doing everything out of sheer force, when duties feel burdensome – it’s time to pay attention to your well-being. Listen to your body. Give it what it needs.

“Sometimes I wake up in a state where I understand that I won’t be helpful to others today. But today, I can be helpful to myself.”

The story of Irina’s acquaintance with the Educational House of Human Rights in Chernihiv began with the announcement of a group recruitment for documenting war crimes. The program aimed to document crimes committed against educational institutions, and for Irina, as an educator, it was very close to her heart.

“The Russian liberators destroyed more than one educational institution in Kherson. Among them was the oldest gymnasium in the city, completely demolished. The blood froze in my veins at the sight of it.”

Inside, everything churned with anger, but what can a civilian do to make the aggressor be held accountable? At the very least – remember.

I wanted to learn how to legally punish those who bring misery to our land.

This experience became valuable and intriguing, so when Irina saw a notice about enrollment in the Psychosocial Rehabilitation Program from the House, she applied.

“I came and realized that this is what I needed—a week dedicated to my own needs. I am very grateful to the House for the opportunity to visit Chernihiv, meet lecturers who taught me documentation, and talk to new interesting people. After conversations with psychologists, I understood that the documentation school is an essential additional development, but I am still primarily an educator. I’ve devoted 13 years of my life to education! In the Psychosocial Rehabilitation Program, I also met incredible participants and trainers. I am currently undergoing group therapy every Saturday with one of them.”

The Psychosocial Rehabilitation Program was supported by the Emergency Support Ukraine (ESU) project.

Grounding techniques, breathing practices, exercises, and meditations – all of these were actively studied and practiced by the participants. Irina continues to be supported by the connections she made with new friends.

And she confesses—war has become a source of unexpected discoveries for her.

“On one of my journeys, I was in Kharkiv. I fell in love with this city from the first walk and forever! So majestic and unyielding. There’s an outstanding personality there—Hamlet Zinkovsky, a street artist. And on one of the streets, I saw his drawing on the gates. It depicted a children’s swing, and it said: war steals a lot of time and opportunities, and below it—war gives a lot of time and opportunities.

As horrifying as it may sound, it’s true. If not for the war, I wouldn’t have visited so many Ukrainian cities that I hadn’t planned to visit before the war, wouldn’t have been in the House, wouldn’t have met different people. It’s terrible, but it’s our reality. Many doors open. We look at many things from different perspectives. We learn to accept and be grateful.”

Irina admits she would like to visit Uzhgorod and see the cherry blossoms, inspired by the camp “Energy of Your Future,” where she worked as a trainer in March 2023. The girls fondly call their city “Uzhik.” Still on the list are Ivano-Frankivsk, Rivne, Lutsk, and many other cities in Ukraine.

After the victory, in peaceful Kherson, where we will all visit someday, Irina recommends seeing the island of Dzharilgach, Oleshkiv Sands, and in Kherson itself, visiting the three Dnieper embankments—Richport embankment, the embankments near the Frigate hotel, and near the Eternal Flame. See the painted stationary shelters. Go yachting and look at the city of heroes from “Antoshka”—Antonivsky Bridge, which will undoubtedly be renovated.

But most importantly—so that we all see how the city is recovering. How it will become lively and cheerful again. How there are strong and brave people, real heroes. And see Kherson—a unbreakable hero city.

 


The rehabilitation program operates with the support of ZMINA. Human Rights Center, Human Rights House Foundation, Libereco – Partnership for Human Rights, and the ESU project.
The ESU Project/Resilience Program is implemented by the Human Rights House Foundation in a consortium of civil organizations led by ERIM International, in partnership with the Eastern Europe Foundation, Human Rights House Tbilisi, Belarusian Human Rights House named after Barys Zvozskau, and Black Sea Trust for Regional Cooperation with financial support from the European Union in Ukraine.
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Photo exhibition “Education under fire”, Kherson region

This photo exhibition tells the story of a trip to the Kherson region. In October, our team of documentarians from the Human Rights Education House in Chernihiv conducted a monitoring mission in the Kherson region as part of the project “Education under fire” (Kherson and Sumy regions).” Our goal was to document attacks on educational institutions.

During the 7-day visit, our team managed to document 15 educational institutions. Most of them are either completely destroyed and beyond restoration or significantly damaged. Russian occupiers lived in many institutions, turning them into torture chambers and ammunition depots, deploying military equipment. Some schools were systematically targeted by Russian forces.

These photos of educational institutions in the Kherson region reveal the truth about what Russia is doing to education in Ukraine.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Zarychenska branch of the primary and preschool education institution “Archangelsk supportive institution of general secondary education” of the Vysokopil village council, Zarychne village.  

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village. 

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village. 

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Novovoskresensk Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Novovorontsovsky district, Novovoskresenske village.

Novovoskresensk Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Novovorontsovsky district, Novovoskresenske village.

Liubymiv Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village. 

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village. 

Novovoskresenska Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Novovorontsovsky district, Novovoskresenske village. 

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.  

Novovoskresenska Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Novovorontsovsky district, Novovoskresenske village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Zarychenska branch of the primary and preschool education institution “Archangelsk supportive institution of general secondary education” of the Vysokopil village council, Zarychne village.

Zarychenska branch of the primary and preschool education institution “Archangelsk supportive institution of general secondary education” of the Vysokopil village council, Zarychne village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village. 

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village. 

Novovoskresenska Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Novovorontsovsky district, Novovoskresenske village. 

Novovoskresenska Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Novovorontsovsky district, Novovoskresenske village. 

Liubymivska Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka  village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.

Novovoskresenska Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Novovorontsovsky district, Novovoskresenske village.

“Novovoskresenska Secondary School I-III Levels, Novovoroncovsky District, Kherson Region, Village Novovoskresenske”

“Novovoskresenska Secondary School I-III Levels, Novovoroncovsky District, Kherson Region, Village Novovoskresenske”

Zarychenska branch of the primary and preschool education institution “Archangelsk supportive institution of general secondary education” of the Vysokopil village council, Zarychne village.

Liubymivka Comprehensive School I-III degrees, Ivaniivska village council, Henichesk district, Liubymivka village.


The author of the photos: Tetyana Symonenko.

As part of the project ‘Education under fire (Kherson and Sumy Regions),’ with financial support from the Czech organization People in Need, as part of the SOS Ukraine initiative.

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Cooperation is power

How a resident of the village Kolychivka in Chernihiv region overcame her own fear and crossed a mined crossroads to help people.

Bright and sunny Lyudmyla Mykolaivna, a resident of the village of Kolychivka in the Chernihiv region, has been a retiree for six years. According to Mrs. Lyudmyla, before February 24, 2022, she was engaged in her home, household, and enjoyed time with her grandchildren. She lived well, content with her life.

“I remember this day. My child made the first call at 6 in the morning and told me terrible news. I was shaken; I didn’t know what to do or where to go… I was alone. After some time, my children came to me.”

Former Activists Never Fade Away

Lyudmyla started going to the stores (at that time, there were still three working), buying whatever she could find. In the first days, the queues were endless, and people were grabbing whatever they could because everyone was in shock. Soon, the stores closed due to a lack of goods.

At the beginning of the invasion, realizing that something needed to be done, Mrs. Lyudmyla began calling the village mayor, asking to organize bread delivery. While the bridge was not yet destroyed, bread was delivered from Chernihiv to the village. Lyudmyla Mykolaivna collected bread for the entire street, carried it, and distributed it to everyone. And when they stopped supplying bread, she partially coordinated when people organized themselves and started baking with what was available.

“Farmer Tkachenko, he brought us milk… we made ends meet as best we could.”

After the occupiers left Ivanivka, life in the village began to recover. Humanitarian aid started arriving in Kolychivka, and Lyudmyla Mykolaivna helped distribute it.

“At first, people couldn’t figure it out… Then we decided to write lists for each street and organized distribution. They began to deliver us bread… We were happy and grateful… For those who lost their home, we searched for housing.”

Crossroads

The memory of the crossroads remains imprinted in Mrs. Lyudmyla’s mind. At first, the explosions could be heard from afar, and then they started getting closer and closer. And at one moment, Kolychivka found itself at the crossroads of shelling.

“It was coming at us from Shestovychi, Ivanivka, Lukashivka, and our side was there too. We didn’t know where and what was flying at first. Then we figured out where ours were. We could be calm; it wasn’t aimed at us.”

In the center of the village, to prevent occupiers from reaching the crossroads, anti-tank mines were placed.

“Everything was laid out here, on both sides of the street. So that when they come, we could stop them…”

On the other side of the village, Mrs. Lyudmyla had grandparents who needed care. The way to them lay through the mined crossroads. For a week, the woman did not visit her relatives, and then she asked a neighbor to guide her through that intersection because she was very afraid. She couldn’t avoid visiting because her relatives were also ill. There were no medicines, no light, and no gas. Every morning, overcoming fear, Mrs. Lyudmyla ran to her relatives before the start of shelling.

Mrs. Lyudmyla did not think that she would have to experience such horror at her age…

But thoughts and concern for others overcame the feeling of fear and fueled the fire of faith in goodness and victory!


The material was prepared by Olena Kozinets and Kateryna Trofymenko as part of the educational course “Truth through Stories.”

The project is implemented by the Educational Human Rights House — Chernihiv with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic as part of the local transformation project «Ukraine and Ukrainians: Modern Chronicles of the Fighting for Freedom and Democracy».

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There is no path dearer than the path home

How Russian occupiers intruded into the lives of the Avramenko family, residents of the village of Pryputni in Chernihiv region

For the inhabitants of the village of Pryputni in Chernihiv region, the full-scale invasion by the Russian Federation became a test of resilience. Pryputni residents had no inkling that on February 25, 2022, a tragic chapter in their village’s history would unfold, marked by loss and an unwavering faith in prompt liberation.

War barged into the lives of Ivan and Maria Avramenko, along with distressing concern—on the very first day, February 24, they had to send their son off to war early in the morning. On the second day, at half-past three in the morning, Russians stormed into the village with gunfire, that’s when dark days of occupation began.

Ivan and Maria didn’t seek refuge elsewhere as their domestic animals needed care. “Grandpa arranged a cellar,” says Maria, “and we spent over a month hiding from shells.”

“Daily several-hour shelling… They stood in the field just 200 meters away,” Ivan points direction with his hand.

Our interlocutor observed helicopters landing on the enemy’s field base, unloading the wounded, and from the window  he saw how peaceful territories were shelled. Every day, the enemy brought in hundreds of deadly weapons and aimed them at people who did not expect this “Russian peace” and were living their quiet lives.

When the Russians first entered Ivan’s yard, he boldly asked them why they had come to his land since no one had invited them. “We came to liberate you,” and the villagers saw the cost of their “liberation” soon. Around each house, there were three or four tanks; when entering homes, they drove out the elderly, women with children onto the streets, and the hosts had nothing left but to move into cellars.

“They ransacked everything in my house,” recalls Ivan. “Even climbed into the attic. They took almost all the goods, even socks. They caught all the chickens, ducks, fried them here, roasted. And so in every house,” laments Ivan.

A little later, our people gave them a worthy rebuff, and it became the first triumphant joy and an unconditional hope that the Armed Forces of Ukraine would definitely liberate Ukrainian villages and cities from the onslaught.

The residents of Pryputni endured about a month and a half of occupation—without warmth, light, and in constant fear for their own and their loved ones’ lives.

“I hid a generator in the cellar,” says Ivan, “so my fellow villagers would secretly come to me and recharge their mobile phones, power banks. I had fuel reserved for trips to the apiary before the war, which is in my forest, so the bees didn’t feel the horrors of occupation,” Ivan jokes and immediately becomes more somber.

Ivan told how his beekeeper friend and his wife went to the funeral on bicycles and found their own death on the way. They were simply shot. Ivan didn’t talk much about himself, but his wife Maria remembered how her husband hid in the forest for a whole day because the occupiers intended to kill him.

Our heroes’ son was fighting for Bahmut while their native village in the north of our country was occupied. He held the eastern positions for 4.5 months. Currently, he is fighting on a different front.

Russian troops left the village on March 30 around half past six in the morning, and our Armed Forces smashed and scattered several hundred units of enemy equipment near Krupichpole.

“You should have seen how they ran like rats from a sinking ship,” our eyewitness enthusiastically recounts. “Scattered in all directions, and our plane chased after them, oh, how it went… It was a pleasure to watch. And when our Ukrainian bird went again, then snow fell and thick fog gathered, which prevented the complete destruction of the enemy on the spot. But a little later, their retribution still caught up with them.

The village is gradually recovering from the consequences of occupation and the atrocities of invaders. People have put their homes in order after fleeing the orcs. However, several dwellings remain completely destroyed, and their owners still live with relatives. But there is hope that people will eventually return to their homes, and the page filled with human sorrow and suffering will close forever, and this story will never repeat itself.

The happiest event during the war for the Avramenko couple was the arrival of their son on short leave. He arrived at his parents’ house with a huge bouquet of flowers. Maria says she has never received such an “infinite” bouquet, and her happiness was the greatest in all the flowers of the world. After all, the son returned, if not for long, from the war.

The embroidered towel made by Maria is an amulet for her son and his comrades. In return, Maria received a gift from the brigade where her son serves: a flag as a symbol of victory and gratitude for the mother of a warrior-defender.


This material was prepared by Lesya Volokh and Nataliya Nesterenko, participants of the educational program “Truth Through Stories,” which is carried out by the Human Rights Education House in Chernihiv with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic as part of the local transformation project “Ukraine and Ukrainians: Modern Chronicles of the Struggle for Freedom and Democracy.”

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How the residents of Pryputni survived the Russian occupation

The picturesque village of Pryputni in Chernihiv region is one of many villages that endured Russian occupation. Friendly people live here, still recovering from the temporary occupation.

Residents recount that the Russians did whatever they pleased in the village – rummaging through cellars, catching and slaughtering chickens, forcing homeowners out of their houses, indulging in drinking, and causing havoc. Tanks destroyed houses, a store, fences around the church and school. Much harm was done, but everything can be rebuilt; the lives of seven fellow villagers, however, cannot be recovered—five were shot by Russian forces, and two detonated mines.

For a small village with around three hundred inhabitants, this is a great tragedy, and they can’t stop talking and crying about it.

On February 25, 2022, tanks and heavy equipment of the “Russian world” entered the village.

We meet a local, Hryhoriy Oleksandrovych Oliynyk, born in 1936. He worked as a driver in the local collective farm and later managed a farm. Together with his wife, they raised three daughters and have grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

His wife, Vira Petrovna, passed away in 2003, and he now lives with his daughter Lyudmyla, son-in-law Oleksiy, and grandson Vladyslav in their house. The young man, along with his grandfather, emotionally recounts the atrocities committed by the occupiers in their village.

Killed by Russia

Ten kilometers from Pryputni lies the village of Krupychpole. In mid-March, Yevhen Chemeris and Oleksandr Hryshchenko were traveling there and were shot with a machine gun, burning in their car. This happened in mid-March, according to Hryhoriy Oleksandrovych.

The next story is even more shocking in its cruelty and cynicism. In the neighboring village of Vyshnivka, three kilometers from Priputni, Hryhoriy Prodani’s father died. He and his wife Svitlana were riding on bicycles to the funeral in the morning. Unfortunately, they ran into a column of Russian mercenaries who simply shot the couple. The man died instantly, and the woman died in the hospital. Three children became orphans.

Another emotionally recounted story is about medics Volodymyr and Tetiana Pabat (known as Symoni) who stayed in the occupation with their two children to provide medical assistance. On March 31, 2022, they were returning with their children Hanna and Sasha from the Bezborodkiv hamlet on the edge of the village. Their car hit an anti-tank mine, and the parents died, the children suffered severe injuries yet survived. Now, Hanna is raising her younger brother; he is her entire family.

There are countless tragic stories for the grandfather and grandson. Each story is emotional, and tears cannot be held back.

How Bohdan and his father Mykola stole the “Hurricane”

But there are also stories that truly impress with their bravery. When the occupiers entered the village, as Vladyslav recounts, they looted and robbed the store, so there was no bread to buy for a while. Villagers helped each other survive as best they could. Those with flour baked bread and pancakes and shared them with neighbors. Those who lost their homes were sheltered by fellow villagers. After two weeks, risking their lives, locals started bringing bread from Ichnia. Families with children received a loaf per child, and adults received half a loaf each. That’s how they survived.

Vladyslav’s friend, Bohdan Hryshchenko, together with his father Mykola, residents of Vyshnivka village, stole a “Hurricane” from the occupiers in broad daylight, drove it into the woods, and then handed it over to the Nizhyn Territorial Defense. Ukrainians don’t abandon their own, and they will always come to help, Vlad says.

Epilogue

Life goes on; a cat with kittens joined the family, and they feed them because they are so small and helpless, says Lyudmyla. We wish them health, victory, a peaceful sky, and invite them to Kropyvnytskyi.


The material was prepared by Svitlana Filipova and Oleksander Perevedentsev  as part of the «Truth Through Stories» School.
The project is implemented by the Educational Human Rights House — Chernihiv with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic as part of the local transformation project «Ukraine and Ukrainians: Modern Chronicles of the Fighting for Freedom and Democracy».