From Yahoo/AP:
“A loving dad and his injured
son pay war's costs in Ukraine”
(Serhii Shumei, 64, talks to his
son Vitalii, 34, a Ukrainian officer heavily wounded in a battle with Russian
forces, in a city hospital in Chernihiv, Ukraine, Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023.
Vitalii, a long-range anti-aircraft missile commander, was wounded in the
Donbas region of eastern Ukraine that has become synonymous with horrific
losses in ongoing fighting for both Ukraine and Russia.)
In a Ukrainian hospital ward for
wounded soldiers, where daylight barely penetrates, a father talks to his
injured son for hours. Serhii Shumei, 64, never scolded Vitalii for choosing to
go to war. Even now, despite the damage done to his son's brain by an exploding
artillery shell, Serhii feels pride, not pity. “I’ve been constantly with him
in the last five months, beside him, beside him, beside him," says Serhii,
a retired former soldier himself. "I’m not going anywhere. … except for a
smoke.”
Vitalii, a 34-year-old long-range
anti-aircraft missile commander, was wounded in the Donbas region of eastern
Ukraine that has become synonymous with horrific losses in ongoing fighting for
both Ukraine and Russia. Quite how deadly isn't known — because neither side is
saying. From the stream of wounded soldiers that are coming off frontlines to
hospitals like the one where Vitalii lies, it's evident the costs are severe. Both
sides have poured troops and resources to capture or defend Donbas strongholds,
fighting over months of grinding, attritional combat to what has largely become
a bloody stalemate. After setbacks elsewhere in Ukraine for President Vladimir
Putin's nearly 11-month invasion, Russia is looking for some sort of localized
success in the Donbas, even if that just means taking control of a town or two
pounded into rubble. Ukraine wants to make Russia's advances as costly as
possible. The Donbas towns of Bakhmut and Soledar have been turned into
hellscapes as a result. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described them
as “completely destroyed,” strewn with corpses and craters, and with “almost no
life left.” “This is what madness looks like," Zelenskyy says.
Vitalii was wounded Aug. 25 on
another section of the Donbas frontline, in Adviivka, about 70 kilometers (45
miles) south of Bakhmut. The shell that struck his dugout set off other
explosives. The blast tore a crater in Vitalii's skull that is as deep and broad
as half a melon. His brain injuries were so severe that doctors doubted he'd
show signs of consciousness again. Now, Vitalii sometimes seems aware of his
surroundings. He blinks. He can swallow. But he’s largely immobile.
Serhii refuses to give up on him.
“We are seeing some progress, getting back on our feet. This is my
opinion," he says. He spends hours at Vitalii's bedside, sharing news from
the battlefields, reciting from books, and reading out messages of support. They're
sent by grateful Ukrainians who urge Vitalii to “Hold on to life! We really
need you!” and say “You are strong! You will manage!” Serhii says tears roll
down Vitalii’s cheeks when he reads them to him. Other signs of improvement
appeared in late December, when Vitalii started wiggling his toes, Serhii says.
Vitalii also has started to frown, which Serhii interprets as meaning that his
son is interested in what he's reading to him.
And recently, Serhii says,
another breakthrough: audible responses from Vitalii. “I’ve started asking him
‘Do you know who I am?’ And he answered ‘Dad’.” Another of Vitalii's frequent
visitors is Iryna Timofeyeva, a volunteer whose brainchild it was to collect
messages of support. "The love of the family, the attention of other
people, very often helps the positive dynamics of the patient,” she says. “It
is very important for the wounded that he is not alone. That is how he
understands that he has to fight.”
Vitalii is, for now, alone in his
ward, after other patients were transferred for rehabilitation elsewhere. But
the beds around him are unlikely to stay empty for long, given the ferocity of
the fighting in the Donbas. Vitalii's hospital in Chernihiv, north of Ukraine's
capital, Kyiv, is among those where soldiers get long-term follow-up care after
their wounds have been stabilized closer to the fronts. Serhii feels that
caring for his son is his contribution to the war effort. “I will put him back
on his feet. This is my dream,” he says. Inclining to his son’s ear, he asks:
“Ukraine will win, we will win, right?” The answer is silence.
^ These are the real heroes of
Ukraine and the World. Both those who go to defend others as well as their
Families. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/loving-dad-injured-son-pay-085733547.html
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