The Mercury News

Ukrainian village faces Orthodox Easter churchless

- By Cara Anna

LUKASHIVKA, UKRAINE >> A single metal cross remains inside the church of shattered brick and blackened stone. Russian soldiers used the house of worship for storing ammunition, residents said, and Ukrainian forces shelled the building to make the Russians leave.

There will be no Orthodox Easter service here today in this small village in northern Ukraine.

One of the church's golden domes was blown off. Its gilded cross is propped up against an exterior wall.

“It's a great pity,” resident Valentina Ivanivna, 70, said, standing with her bike on Orthodox Good Friday as men dismantled abandoned Russian military vehicles nearby.

The church in Lukashivka, a village near the city of Chernihiv, survived World War II and the most austere years of the Soviet Union, a time when authoritie­s stripped it of its religious icons, residents said.

This time, locals think it will take years for the church to recover its past beauty. Its bells fell onto unstable ground that is littered with ammunition casings and cans of Russian tinned meat. A stand for candles remains, along with a dented teapot and a pasta strainer. Outside, the finned part of a rocket is stuck in the mud.

Villagers have vowed to rebuild, whatever it takes. They've already started on their own homes, even as they wait for basic services to resume.

There is no gas available to bake Easter bread. At a bend in a road, a military chaplain, Volodymyr Vyshyvkin, and volunteers handed out food and verses.

Remember, Jesus was resurrecte­d, the chaplain told them. Ukraine will do the same. He called on the villagers to pray for those on the front line in places like Mariupol, a southern city the Russians are determined to take and continued to bomb Friday.

Resistance never died during the local occupation of Lukashivka, said Valentyna Golyak, 64.

“I was telling the Russians, `You will stay in this land as fertilizer. If you want to kill me, kill me.' They looked ashamed,” she said. “I think they don't believe in God.”

 ?? PETROS GIANNAKOUR­IS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Residents walk with their bicycles in front of a damaged church in Lukashivka in northern Ukraine on Friday. A single metal cross remains inside the Orthodox church.
PETROS GIANNAKOUR­IS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Residents walk with their bicycles in front of a damaged church in Lukashivka in northern Ukraine on Friday. A single metal cross remains inside the Orthodox church.

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