Santa Fe New Mexican

Before fighting, countries celebrated holiday together

Victory Day once a memorial to millions killed in Russia, Ukraine during WWII

- By Michael Schwirtz

She carried a simple bouquet of white lilacs as explosions reverberat­ed through the bright spring air. Tears streaked her weathered face, which was framed by a blue headscarf.

Nina Mikhailovn­a came Monday, as she does every year on May 9, to the eternal flame in a city park that commemorat­es the allied victory in World War II. She came to honor the memory of her father, who was killed in 1943, and to remember those who died liberating her native Kramatorsk in eastern Ukraine from the Nazis, whom she remembers forcing her into the fields as a child to cut and gather wheat.

At nearly 89, Mikhailovn­a thought she would never witness anything as bad as that war with the Germans. But the current war with the Russians is worse, she said.

At least the Germans were enemies. “These are our people,” she said of the Russian forces, invoking the intertwine­d history and the family ties that link Russia and Ukraine. As she spoke, Russian rockets landed close enough to rumble the ground where she stood.

“My niece lives in Moscow but was born in Slovyansk,” she said, referring to a Ukrainian city a few miles away from Kramatorsk. “And now they’re sending her husband to fight. What’s he supposed to do, kill his mother-in-law?

“That’s what is so hard to endure.”

For decades, Ukrainians and Russians were bound by their shared experience in World War II. Together they died by the millions under German fire, and together they drove the Nazis from their lands. And each year on May 9, when the Soviet Union marked Victory Day, they marched in parades and laid flowers at monuments, always together.

But this year, as Russian President Vladimir Putin used the holiday to defend his invasion, praising Russian troops for “fighting for the Motherland,” Ukrainians hid in bomb shelters and fought in trenches and died in air raids, the way their grandparen­ts did so many years go.

The eastern region of Donbas, which the Kremlin is trying to seize in this war, has traditiona­lly looked to Moscow as a center of political and cultural gravity, and many residents have close family ties to Russia. The war has complicate­d this relationsh­ip. After Putin annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine and instigated a separatist war in Donbas in 2014, the government in Kyiv stripped away the Soviet symbolism from Victory Day. Ukraine celebrates it simply as a victory over fascism, which some Ukrainians now associate with Putin’s government as well.

“We have beat fascism, and we will defeat Ruscism,” said Pavel Kirilenko, governor of the Donetsk region, who arrived with heavily armed guards to lay flowers at the monument.

All Monday morning in Kramatorsk, sirens wailed and the thump of bombs and rockets shook the city as Russian forces pushed nearer from the north and the east. They are not moving as quickly as Putin might have liked, but they are now close enough to Kramatorsk, a large industrial hub in the Donetsk region, to keep all but the most intrepid, including Mikhailovn­a, away from the park that holds the World War II monument.

At a hospital Monday, ambulances arrived carrying civilians and soldiers wounded from the day’s shelling. A 28-year-old soldier named Andriy, pale and shivering in a hospital cot, described a hellish round of bombing that morning, which culminated for him when shrapnel flayed open his upper thigh and shattered his femur.

“It was obvious that on the 9th of May this would happen,” said Andriy, who was working on a milk farm in Denmark when the war started and came back home to fight. “We were ready for this.”

In Barvinkove, west of Kramatorsk, the rockets have rained down day and night, destroying homes and forcing all but the most stalwart, or stubborn, to flee. But some people there are less than enthusiast­ic about the ubiquitous Ukrainian troops defending their town from Russian forces moving in from the north, said Bohdan Krynychnyi, a 20-year-old volunteer soldier.

“Here we have problems with locals,” said Krynychnyi while taking a break from the fighting to buy groceries at the town’s one working market. His call sign is Monk because he left his training at a Ukrainian monastery to join the war. “They are waiting for the Russians here,” he added.

He described entering a house that morning that had been bombed by Russian forces. Inside, he said, he found a Soviet flag and an orange-andblack St. George ribbon, which has been turned into a nationalis­t symbol by Putin’s government and is worn by many soldiers now fighting against Ukraine.

Outside of town, the soldiers of Ukraine’s 93rd Mechanized Brigade were having a victory celebratio­n of their own. They had recently acquired a nearly new self-propelled artillery piece with modern Russian firing and targeting technology and were learning how to use it. The large armored vehicle, which can shoot rounds with high precision up to 20 kilometers away, had been abandoned by its Russian crew during a Ukrainian attack, said Maj. Serhii Krutikov, deputy commander.

“We’re using their weapons against them,” Krutikov said. “We don’t have this kind of equipment in Ukraine.”

For Maria Mefodyevna, a 93-year-old Barvinkove resident who also remembers the Nazi arrival in World War II, all that matters is that the shooting stops. Her home on a residentia­l street is pockmarked with shrapnel damage. Her husband and sons are dead, and she is alone.

“I just want the war to end,” she said, standing uneasily in her living room dressed in a blue flower dress and headscarf. “I only have a little while left to live, and of course I want to see who wins.”

 ?? JAMES HILL/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Participan­ts in a March of the Immortal Regiment, many with photos of relatives who died in World War II, look skyward as a helicopter flies overhead in Moscow in 2018. Before the outbreak of fighting between the countries in 2014, Ukraine and Russia celebrated their shared World War II history on Victory Day. This year, Ukrainians hid in bomb shelters while Russians celebrated.
JAMES HILL/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Participan­ts in a March of the Immortal Regiment, many with photos of relatives who died in World War II, look skyward as a helicopter flies overhead in Moscow in 2018. Before the outbreak of fighting between the countries in 2014, Ukraine and Russia celebrated their shared World War II history on Victory Day. This year, Ukrainians hid in bomb shelters while Russians celebrated.

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