Call sign Dolphyn, commander of the company of the 68th Jager Brigade, posing for the portrait at his headquoter on Vuhledar direction Vuhledar direction, Donetsk regi
Portrait of Yuri Vitrenko, CEO of Naftogaz, Ukrainain state-owned gas company, at the parking below his office he uses as a shelter during air raid alerts in Kyiv, Ukraine Kyiv
"Liudmyla and Bohdan Nedohoda are a married couple who has been caught up in hostilities in their house in Khrustalne, Luhanshchyna. It was called Krasnyi Luch then. They were hiding in their basement up to the moment they became the only ones who hadn't left the neighborhood. Liudmyla recalls that the scariest thing she experienced when leaving the occupied Donbas region was their way across the bridge. The latter suffered from an explosion, so it was patched up with boards. Luckily, they managed to reach Kyiv safely.
""On 24th, early in the morning, I was going to work and already could hear explosions. I told my friend from Debaltsevo: 'Liuba, I guess the war is here.' A lot of people didn't want to flee. And I kept insisting and telling them that they couldn't imagine how hard it will be if the events escalate.""
Now, it's even harder, the couple admits; it's the age probably. When the shelling of Kyiv stopped being so frequent, they had doubts whether they did the right thing when leaving the capital. Now, they consider coming back as soon as possible - coming back to their true home."
Patients spending time in the Lviv Regional Psychiatric Hospital. Before the war, the hopital had 840 beds. Now it has more than 1,000.
Ukraine’s network of often crumbling Soviet-era psychiatric hospitals is now grappling with a fresh wave of traumatized soldiers, putting further strains on an already overwhelmed care system. Lviv, Ukraine
Danilo Ivanov showing his collection of lego and plastilin handmade characters. Family of Shults are living in in the area of Slobidka in Kherson, just next to the Dnipro, with russsian troops across the river.
Portrait of Volodymyr and Halyna Sanin, 54 y.o., in their home. The foster family of Sanin living in Veliky Burluk, Kharkiv region, on the border with russia. For 10 months, they experienced russian occupation and were liberated by the Ukrainian army in fall 2022 Veliky Burluk, Kharkiv region