Kuwait Times

Ukrainian veterans feed soldiers in hotspots

-

Eat it up quickly, while it’s hot and they’re not shooting

There’s no knock on the door, just the tantalizin­g smell of melted cheese, ham and tomato sauce reaching the noses of Ukrainian soldiers. The pizza delivery man has arrived. As the war goes on in Ukraine’s separatist east, some veterans of the conflict are risking their lives by going back to the frontline to bring pizza to those still in the trenches. “Eat it up quickly, while it’s hot and they’re not shooting,” says the bullet-proofveste­d Oleksiy Kachko, opening a box of pizza in front of a group of surprised soldiers. “This is for us?” the soldiers ask in amazement, smiling.

“The enemies are less than 80 meters (yards) from here. I reckon they can smell our pizza and their mouths are watering,” Kachko says. Kachko, 23, previously fought in the Azov volunteer battalion and his partner in the deliveries, Bogdan Chaban, is also a 23-year-old former volunteer fighter. Now they manage a pizzeria called Pizza Veterano in Mariupol, the only major city still under Kiev rule in the eastern regions controlled by the pro-Russia separatist­s.

Opened in May, the pizza joint employs mostly veterans and people who have fled the war. One of the first things they did was to start delivering pizza to soldiers on the frontline, which is about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from Mariupol. Kachko got the idea from watching the American television series “Generation Kill” about US troops in Iraq dreaming of hot pizza. “We thought how cool that would be and it really did turn out to be very cool,” said Kachko, a tall man with striking blue eyes.

Hiring veterans

Wounded in the war, Kachko lost a lung and decided to use his veteran’s pension to open a cafe. He and Chaban opened a franchise of the successful Pizza Veterano network launched in Kiev by another former soldier several years ago. “It’s not just about earning money, it is employing veterans who find it very hard to get jobs,” Kachko says, while the pizzeria helps them with “adaptation to peaceful life.”

According to President Petro Poroshenko, more than 300,000 Ukrainians-many of them volunteers-have participat­ed in Kiev’s military operations in the east since the outbreak of the conflict four years ago which has claimed more than 10,000 lives. Kiev and its Western allies accuse Russia of funneling troops and arms across the border to fan the flames of the conflict. Moscow has denied the allegation­s despite overwhelmi­ng evidence that it has been involved in the fighting and its explicit political support for the separatist­s.

20 large pizzas

Every week Kachko and Chaban return to the frontline with pizzas paid for with donations made online and in the pizzeria. For security reasons they have to agree the schedule and route of their visits with the military command. “Once a week we bring 20 large pizzas to the soldiers. It’s different units each time, we alternate them,” says Chaban, a slender bearded man wearing a cap with the logo of the US Special Forces. He says he “gets a huge kick out of” bringing the takeaway treat. This time it’s the turn of the village of Vodyane, whose residents have almost all fled the war.

“We try to make sure the delivery is done safely,” says Chaban, pressing hard on the accelerato­r of his dusty SUV as the road passes through an area of open steppe less than 300 meters from the rebel positions.

Feeling less alone

The delivery guys duck into a low dark trench hidden among tall grass and weeds. Their appearance in the Ukrainian positions closest to rebel territory is greeted with pleasure. The battalion is so close to enemy lines that soldiers are not allowed to use electricit­y and mobile phones, smoke cigarettes or even speak loudly. The marines shake hands with their guests and thank them for bringing a hot dish, a welcome change from their cold soup and tinned food.

But it’s not the food that really matters, says Vadym Sukharevsk­iy, the battalion commander. “When a soldier is stuck under constant fire and short of sleep and he sees a guy coming over with pizza, he realizes he’s not alone, that there are many people behind him, praying for him and worrying about him, cheering him on to win and stay healthy.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Ukrainian serviceman carries boxes with pizza delivered to the frontline by Aleksey Kachko.
Ukrainian serviceman carries boxes with pizza delivered to the frontline by Aleksey Kachko.
 ??  ?? A Ukrainian serviceman carries boxes with pizza delivered to the frontline by Aleksey Kachko.
A Ukrainian serviceman carries boxes with pizza delivered to the frontline by Aleksey Kachko.
 ??  ?? Aleksey Kachko, co-owner of the small pizzeria “Pizza Veterano” in Mariupol, hands out pizza to Ukrainian servicemen at the frontline with Russian-backed separatist­s. — AFP photos
Aleksey Kachko, co-owner of the small pizzeria “Pizza Veterano” in Mariupol, hands out pizza to Ukrainian servicemen at the frontline with Russian-backed separatist­s. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Ukrainian servicemen who fight against Russian-backed separatist­s hold a box with pizza delivered to the frontline by Aleksey Kachko, co-owner of small pizzeria “Pizza Veterano” in Mariupol.
Ukrainian servicemen who fight against Russian-backed separatist­s hold a box with pizza delivered to the frontline by Aleksey Kachko, co-owner of small pizzeria “Pizza Veterano” in Mariupol.
 ??  ?? An employee of pizzeria “Pizza Veterano” prepares pizza to be delivered to the frontline for Ukrainian servicemen.
An employee of pizzeria “Pizza Veterano” prepares pizza to be delivered to the frontline for Ukrainian servicemen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait