Current:Home > ContactHe couldn’t see his wedding. But this war-blinded Ukrainian soldier cried with joy at new love -AdvancementTrade
He couldn’t see his wedding. But this war-blinded Ukrainian soldier cried with joy at new love
View
Date:2025-04-16 16:28:44
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Blinded by a Russian mortar shell, Ukrainian veteran Ivan Soroka couldn’t see his bride when she walked into his family home in a shoulderless white dress, a bouquet of white flowers in her right hand.
But when Vladislava Ryabets, 25, stepped toward him, Soroka wept with joy at the new chapter of life starting months after enemy artillery stole his sight.
“The first thing I said after I was wounded was, who will want me now?” said Soroka, 27, sitting inside his family home in a village in the outskirts of Kyiv.
“I succeeded in rebuilding myself,” he said. “I am seeing with my feelings, with my emotions.”
Dozens sat around a garden table in Bortnychi village under a tent decorated with balloons and garlands for a day of festivity steeped in Ukrainian rural tradition. Folk songs and laughter filled the air as neighbors and friends poured into the humble pastoral home, gulped drinks and toasted the young newlyweds. A round loaf decorated with viburnum berries — a symbol of fertility in local tradition — lay on the table.
Beneath the gaiety and carousing ran an undercurrent of anguish: the country remains locked in a ferocious war with Russia.
The AP first met Soroka at a rehabilitation camp for ex-soldiers who lost their vision in combat. The courtship was not unusual in wartime Ukraine: Throughout the capital young men with prostheses hold hands with their partners and family members.
Many couples have fleeting encounters between rare visits home from the frontline. Spouses sometimes travel to cities near combat areas to see their loved ones for a few hours between time fighting. The onset of Russia’s invasion also saw a surge in marriages, as many came to realize the future would be uncertain, and even cut short.
“I feel such pity for my grandson, he’s not seeing what’s around, the beauty,” cried Soroka’s 86-year old grandmother Nataliia, her voice trailing off as she wiped away tears.
“Thank God he has this golden woman in his life,” she said.
Soroka and Ryabets met online on April 6, 2022, less than three months after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Soroka was recovering from line-of-duty pneumonia at a military hospital. He logged into a dating app and saw Ryabets’ profile photo.
“Hello,” he messaged her.
He was ambitious and driven. She was patient and graceful, working with autistic children in a clinic.
“You’re mine now,” he told her, after weeks of chatting in May.
In response, she sent him her ring size measurements as a joke.
Only six weeks after they met, they were having a coffee together during one of Soroka’s short leaves from the front.
“So, where is my ring?” asked Ryabets, again, in jest.
“It’s right here,” Soroka said, and produced the gleaming engagement ring.
But Soroka’s unit was moved to Bakhmut in the Donetsk region for the war’s longest and bloodiest battle.
On Aug. 2, near the village of Horlivka, his unit received an order to withdraw to reserve positions because their section of the frontline had been destroyed.
They began their retreat at night. By the light of dawn they were shelled by Russian troops. Soroka’s eyes were struck with shrapnel. His leg was also wounded but didn’t need to be amputated.
The wounded soldier’s phone was punctured and shattered by the blast wave. Ryabets couldn’t reach Soroka, and worried.
At the hospital a nurse helped him retrieve his SIM and he was able to open messages and get back in touch with his fiancée.
At the hospital in Vinnytsia, Soroka was barely recognizable. Ryabets visited him every weekend until he was discharged nearly a year ago. They had hoped his eyes would heal and his sight would return.
It never did, but her Ryabets’ decision never wavered.
“Nothing changed for me,” she said.
In a corner of the garden away from the party, Soroko’s father Oleksandr, 55, took a moment to smoke.
A Red Army veteran, he could have enlisted, instead of his son, he said.
“I blame myself,” he said, his voice shaking and thoughts scrambled.
As for Soroka, he is determined to move forward, he said. He hopes to find work, and most of all, he hopes for a first child.
He twirled his new wife in a park in Kyiv as the wedding photographer snapped photos, images he couldn’t behold. Ryabets held his hand, guiding her new husband.
At the celebration, Soroka and Ryabets’ parents changed into traditional Ukrainian dress. In line with tradition, since the last child in both families was getting married, their parents were loaded into a wheelbarrow and dumped into a body of water to celebrate their empty nest.
The procession of party guests followed the wheelbarrow across the village, offering passersby a shot of vodka or a baked treat. The more bitter alcohol consumed, the less bitterness in the marriage, they said.
As his mother and father dip into the cool waters of Bortnychi’s pond to mark this new chapter in their lives, Soroka and Ryabets shared a kiss.
The crowd cheered: “To the happy couple!”
___
More of AP’s Ukraine coverage is available at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
veryGood! (56)
Related
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- Olympic swimmers will be diving into the (dirty) Seine. Would you do it?
- U.S. Navy pilot becomes first American woman to engage and kill an air-to-air contact
- Blake Lively Jokes She Wasn't Invited to Madonna's House With Ryan Reynolds
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Joe Biden dropped out of the election. If you're stressed, you're not alone.
- New Mexico village battered by wildfires in June now digging out from another round of flooding
- Biggest questions for all 32 NFL teams: Contract situations, QB conundrums and more
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- USA TODAY Sports Network's Big Ten football preseason media poll
Ranking
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Horoscopes Today, July 22, 2024
- ‘We were built for this moment': Black women rally around Kamala Harris
- Iowa law banning most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy to take effect Monday
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Carpenter bees sting, but here’s why you’ll want them to keep buzzing around your garden
- Rachel Lindsay’s Ex Bryan Abasolo Details Their “Tough” Fertility Journey
- Body camera video shows Illinois deputy fatally shooting Sonya Massey inside her home
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
'Bachelorette' star's ex is telling all on TikTok: What happens when your ex is everywhere
Love Island USA’s Kordell and Serena React to His Brother Odell Beckham Jr. “Geeking” Over Their Romance
Army searching for missing soldier who did not report to Southern California base
Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
Conservatives use shooting at Trump rally to attack DEI efforts at Secret Service
Search called off for small airplane that went missing in fog and rain over southeast Alaska
Kamala Harris is preparing to lead Democrats in 2024. There are lessons from her 2020 bid