Orlando Sentinel

Influx of wounded

Local Ukrainian nonprofit helps more soldiers after one year at war

- By Natalia Jaramillo

“Ukraine doesn’t have a facility like this so we are hoping to be able to treat some soldiers there without having to take them out of the county.”

— Irina Vashchuk Discipio, founder and president of Revived Soldiers Ukraine

On his hands and knees with four land mine explosives strapped to his arms and legs, each weighing roughly 22 pounds, Ruslan Tishchenko crawled through man-made ditches to place the bombs in a straight line on June 8. After placing two of the mines roughly 6 ½ feet apart, he briefly lifted his head and noticed someone flashing a light off to the distance in some trees.

Seconds later, a Russian tank began shooting and set off a land mine about 32 feet away followed by another two explosions that threw him over 23 feet into the air. Immediatel­y, the 45-year-old Ukrainian soldier knew his injuries would be bad as he saw his right leg facing the wrong direction.

Fellow soldiers carried Tishchenko into a car with the last land mine still strapped to his right leg as he hadn’t finished placing the mine before the Russians discovered him. After being transferre­d from the car into an ambulance Tishchenko made it to an emergency center in four hours and was later transferre­d to a hospital in Lviv where he stayed recovering from surgery.

Tishchenko’s right leg was broken and a tourniquet wrapped around his left leg was placed tight to stop the bleeding from his artery where shrapnel from the explosion hit him. A nurse at the hospital in Lviv later told Tishchenko that upon his arrival his left leg was black.

His left leg was amputated. Once recovered, he applied to Revived Soldiers Ukraine, a nonprofit that could bring him to Orlando for a prosthetic leg.

Tishchenko, who is still in Orlando, will mark the anniversar­y of the invasion at the annual Ukrainian Festival Saturday and

Sunday.

Irina Vashchuk Discipio, founder and president of Revived Soldiers Ukraine, has worked with roughly 21 soldiers like Tishchenko since Feb. 24, 2022, when Russia’s full invasion of Ukraine began.

Since she opened Revived Soldiers Ukraine in 2015, Discipio had helped 53 wounded Ukrainian soldiers before Russia’s invasion. Seven soldiers from the last five years went back to the battlefiel­d throughout the last year and two were killed.

“We see a lot of leg amputation­s that are more complicate­d than before,” Discipio said.

In order to get wounded soldiers out of Ukraine, they must first heal in their hospitals. After, they are transporte­d to Warsaw, Poland where they get help with visas and then are flown to various hospitals throughout the United States depending on what their injuries are, Discipio said.

In Orlando, where Discipio raises her two children and calls home base, leg amputees are given prosthetic­s.

“They give us a special rate here and they are the best prosthetic center for legs in the country in my opinion,” Discipio said about Prosthetic and Orthotic Associates.

Revived Soldiers Ukraine pays for each soldier’s visa, flight, accommodat­ion and prosthetic­s, a process she said is grueling and takes a lot of patience.

“We rely on donations to be able to get each soldier here,” Discipio said. “It’s mainly the Americans who have been donating the most.”

In the last year, Revived Soldiers Ukraine has raised and spent $7 million in between paying for prosthetic­s, accommodat­ion, flights and a new rehab facility in Ukraine that will open in three months.

“Ukraine doesn’t have a facility like this so we are hoping to be able to treat some soldiers there without having to take them out of the county,” Discipio said.

The facility will have five therapists and one doctor who will be trained in the United States, Discipio said.

Discipio runs the nonprofit with 30 volunteers in the U. S. and other volunteers in Ukraine, a small crew to handle the influx of soldiers needing help after the war began.

“It’s a lot,” Discipio said. “We always need volunteers ... and, if [volunteers] don’t speak Ukrainian, we can have them drive soldiers to and from appointmen­ts.”

Discipio houses soldiers and their wives or families mostly in vacation rentals but with so many, she has begun to house some single soldiers in her own home.

“I can’t just sit at home and do nothing,” Discipio said. “I need to help in some way.”

With more soldiers injured on a daily basis as the war commemorat­es one year, raising the money to get more soldiers help and the ability to purchase the prosthetic­s are in jeopardy.

Tishchenko’s leg cost $30,000 and 28-year-old Mykhalo Varvarych, a Ukrainian soldier who lost both of his legs after a mine explosion, will cost the nonprofit $25,000 per leg, Discipio said.

Tishchenko and Varvarych will speak at the annual Ukrainian Festival at Lake Eola park from noon through 8 p.m. Saturday and noon through 6 p.m. Sunday. The free event will feature live Ukrainian music, food vendors and fashion show.

Discipio has visited Ukraine five times since the war began to visit her parents who live outside Kyiv and brother who is a soldier while helping facilitate getting wounded soldiers out of the country.

During her first visit a few months after the war began the most shocking thing was seeing the thousands of Ukrainians walking towards the border of Poland.

“It’s depressing,” Discipio said. “I just saw miles and miles of people walking and schools are destroyed. There’s just complete destructio­n.”

 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Iryna Vashchuk Discipio, left, talks with her fiancee, Mykhalo Varvarych, at Prosthetic and Orthotic Associates in Orlando on Thursday. Varvarych, a commander with Ukraine’s 80th Airborne Assault Brigade, lost his legs after a land mine explosion.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL Iryna Vashchuk Discipio, left, talks with her fiancee, Mykhalo Varvarych, at Prosthetic and Orthotic Associates in Orlando on Thursday. Varvarych, a commander with Ukraine’s 80th Airborne Assault Brigade, lost his legs after a land mine explosion.
 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Ruslan Tishchenko pauses Thursday at Prosthetic and Orthotic Associates.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL Ruslan Tishchenko pauses Thursday at Prosthetic and Orthotic Associates.

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