From Local Public Office to Battlefield: Ukraine’s Unsung Heroes

By Roman Bochkala, journalist at “Inter” TV channel.
05.24.2014
Translated and edited by Voices of Ukraine.

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With this guy we talked briefly and rather interruptedly. From our first words it became clear to me–this is a young man who is well-read, well-educated; a true patriot. But I could not get his name. He just told me that he was from Chernihiv Oblast [region].

And what does he do for work–he’s the head of his village. They elected him at 24 years of age. The second youngest in this position in all of Ukraine. And in March he was mobilized. The only one out of the whole village. Now he’s a sniper.

He was among the intelligence scouts near Sloviansk. On the front edge so to speak … He participated in contact fighting many times. He grappled with them in hand-to-hand combat … where he was yesterday, he is no longer there. If anyone knows this guy, let me know!

Those who are like he is–are the real heroes. My dream is that out of others like him, a new nation will grow. Guys and girls who can manage not just a native village, but their native country sincerely and with love.

Source: Roman Bochkala FB

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Video with both men in it here:

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George Tuka: About the Ukrainian army… for all you armchair generals

chornajuravka's avatarEuromaidan PR

troops

There are too many specialist nowadays who all think they know “how it should be done”: it should be done with helicopters, with specialists, with contractors…

Dear “specialists”! Ukraine has the army that it has. An army that wasn’t properly dressed, trained or equiped for 23 years. An army that wasn’t paid and that was unconscionably demolished by all presidents and premiers for all those years!

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North Crimea Canal, A History of its Construction

chornajuravka's avatarEuromaidan PR

In the picture above, each dated stone has a three-line poem dedication.. For the year 1963 the poem reads "Dnipro gave water to earth, and heath is blooming brightly. The work of masters of new life is glorious. Working people are capable of doing anything". In the picture above, each dated stone has a three-line poem dedication.. For the year 1963 the poem reads “Dnipro gave water to earth, and heath is blooming brightly. The work of masters of new life is glorious. Working people are capable of doing anything”.

Dnipro River water provides 85 percent of Crimea’s consumption needs. When rivers and springs dry and go shallow from the heat, storage reservoirs of natural water runoff are at best half full. However, off-channel storage reservoirs maintain their levels. Thanks to the Canal, Crimea will never be short of water as the canal helps to supply the storage reservoirs.

This article was published in Krymskie izvestiya (Crimean News) newspaper issued by the Parliament of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea a year and a half ago.

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The peculiar monument pictured stands in the park of Krasnoperekopsk town. There are three ten meter concrete pylons facing…

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By Lesya Litvinova 
05.16.2014 Facebook
Translated and edited by Voices of Ukraine

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Today, I have a little holiday.

My Varenka  [diminutive from Varvara] turned a week old. The first tiny birthday.

I want to say ‘thank you’ to her. If she weren’t in my life–a lot of things would have gone differently.

She has suffered enough from me this winter. I must have been a very bad mother. I ate little, slept little, cried a lot, and froze even more, often forgot that I was not alone, carried heavy loads, was at the wheel for days, inhaled gas on Hrushevskiy Street, delivered gas, tires, and wood by car, hid the wounded at home and realized what could happen to me for all this. Forgive me, my little daughter!

On December 1 of last year [2013], I was very afraid that someone could push me into the crowd of thousands at the first Viche.

By the end of December I was just afraid to get clubbed in the stomach. It was just some non-stop haunting nightmare.

In January, I has to turn off the phones and move to a friends’ place–the police watched my house for several days. This is when I got scared for the first time that my daughter could be born not at home, but in a detention center.

By February, I was not afraid of anything. Probably there is a threshold of fear beyond which nothing remains.

Forgive me, Varenka. I wasn’t afraid to lose you anymore, I was in a whole-hearted despair realizing that you could still see this turbulent world.

I was comforted by one thing–that in any case we would be together–in this life, or in afterlife. You older sisters and brother didn’t have this opportunity–they moved away to live with their grandmother. And every time I ran over to see them, I would bid them farewell on departure as if it was for ever.

By the end of February, I learned the funeral service and “Plyve Kacha”  [Ukrainian folk song about losing loved ones to war] by heart. These inundated everything, without leaving any room for lullabies. Forgive me, baby, I will recall them.

You were born in a turbulent country. I don’t know what it will be like when you grow up. I can hardly imagine its future borders. But I’m absolutely sure that you and I did everything in our power to make this country better. We moved a huge and backbreaking boulder. Together. Thank you, baby daughter!

Grow faster, my flesh and blood. I need to tell you so much… No one will probably ever understand me as well, as you…

I will try my hardest to be a good Mom to you.

I love you so very much!

Source: Lesya Litvinova FB

 

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Russian Helicopters Attempted to Cross Border Between Crimea and Kherson Oblast

chornajuravka's avatarEuromaidan PR

heliOn May 24th at 12:55 pm, two Mi-35 helicopters belonging to the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation attempted to cross the administrative boundary line between Crimea and Kherson Oblast. According to the press-service of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, military personnel of a look-out station belonging to one of the units of the Ground Forces of Armed Forces of Ukraine, executing orders in the area of Cape Kutara in Kherson Oblast, forced the provocateurs to reverse their course by opening warning fire from an anti-aircraft emplacement.

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