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Ukraine war student-turned-soldier: ‘Friends die in your arms’

English News

Ukraine war student-turned-soldier: ‘Friends die in your arms’

Sunakhari News/ Kathmandu –

Maxsym Lutsyk looks older and more serious, and makes fewer jokes, than when I saw him in the days after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Back then, the 19-year-old had just put university on hold and volunteered to fight.

 

Last week he made a difficult journey out of the Donbas front line, using back roads at night to avoid artillery fire, to pick up supplies for his unit and to tell me what it has been like fighting the Russians. We met in Bakhmut, a small town well within the range of Russian artillery. Some of its buildings are in ruins and the city has been almost emptied of civilians.

 

For three weeks, Maxsym and his comrades had fought to keep control of a position they called Serber, after a small dog they had adopted. It was in a smashed-up former factory in Rubizhne, a town that eventually fell to the Russians.”It was like hell. There were no good positions to defend. We had been in trenches, sometimes shelters from Soviet times, and a fire station.” His unit was targeted by tank fire about 25 times a day, he says. “One of my friends was killed there and maybe 10 or 15 guys were injured seriously.”

 

Student signing up

Now, summer is almost on them and Ukraine’s fertile black soil is bursting with life, the deadliest fighting is in Donbas. Russia’s generals are learning from its enemy’s victories around Kyiv, the capital, and Kharkiv, the second city. Defeat in March led the Russian army to fall back, in April and May, on what it knows best. Its forces and fearsome firepower are concentrated in a narrow sector of east Ukraine.

 

Now it is close to forcing Ukrainian forces out of Luhansk, one of the two regions that make up Donbas. The other, Donetsk, where Ukraine has a bigger footprint, is already being hit by Russian artillery. I first came across Maxsym, a biology student, in early March. He, and his university friend Dmytro Kisilenko, an 18-year-old studying economics, had signed up to fight shortly after Russia launched its invasion.

 

As they waited alongside others like them, in the bitter cold, to be bussed to their training centre, they looked like young lads off to a festival or a camping trip, except for the old Kalashnikovs they had just been issued. Witnessing 18- and 19-year-olds, full of the invincible sense that young men have, going to war in Europe, just as they had during the blood-soaked years of the 20th Century was moving, depressing, and alarming. It was a sign of the big war that was coming.

 

In March, Maxsym and Dmytro and all Ukrainians were adapting, the way human beings always do in war. After the first shock old lives and routines fade into a new, all-consuming version of real life. During their brief training early in March, we talked about how the war was changing everything. Maxsym already sounded old for his years.

 

Uni to uniform – Jeremy meets Maxsym in March

“We can’t meet our wives, our girlfriends, our children. We can’t do our business, like we were doing before the invasion. But everyone understands that we have a more important mission now. And we will continue doing business, growing up our children. We will kiss our wives and girlfriends many times, but after the war.” Their lives, those of every Ukrainian, were turned upside down, when the Russians invaded on 24 February. So have the lives of all of us who aren’t Ukrainian.

 

Despite Russian advances, Maxsym retains an iron-clad determination to fight. His friend Dmytro, who fought in the battle for Kyiv, is remains in the capital. As they were students, service in the Donbas is not compulsory. “As long as it’s necessary to hold, we are ready to freeze in trenches, to lose our hearing. We are ready even to die there, but we will win as much time as it’s necessary for the entire civilized world to beat Russia in non-military ways.”

 

He has no time for people calling themselves Ukraine’s allies, who say they should trade territory for some kind of accommodation with Vladimir Putin’s Russia. “I think that there is no way to make a deal with Putin. Putin understands only the language of bullets, blood, war crimes and something else. It is impossible to say take this part of the land and the war will end.” I asked Maxsym how the war was changing him.

 

At the start of the year, he was arranging concerts and involved with youth politics in Kyiv. “Even now I can’t answer you exactly because it is very hard to understand that some of your friends, they died in your arms. It is hard to live with that fact… and when we left Rubizhne, it was hard for us to understand that we have lost the battle for this factory; for one of the key cities of Luhansk region.”  BBC