At the entrance to the village of Dovhenke, residents have put up a billboard with photos of destroyed houses with text that reads: “Village of Dovhenke: Everyone has a dream to return home. Unfortunately, our village is completely destroyed. Please help us rebuild it.”
The village of Dovhenke lies 60 km from the Russian border and is halfway between Izyum and Sloviansk. The village is of no particular strategic importance, perhaps the Russians wanted the village because it was on a hill overlooking fields and a main road.
Until the war, the 450 inhabitants of the village lived a happy life here. They farmed their fields, grew vegetables and fruits in their gardens, and raised cattle and other domestic animals. But with the first signs of Russian aircraft and the sounds of gunfire in March 2022, the residents of Dovhenke packed their essentials and left the village in a hurry, leaving behind their contented life. Only two elderly men remained in the village. Villagers say that the evacuation team probably weren’t able to find them. Tragically, one died in Dovhenke, the other was taken by Russians to Izyum, and there he disappeared, no one knows what did happen to him.
11/11/2023 – Natalia stands in front of the destroyed school where she used to teach. She and her husband are two of 40 villagers who returned to the village after the Russian forces retreated. Natalia received a generator from a volunteer organisation.
“Now I will be able to teach for a longer time thanks to this support. We returned home on June 21. I am a math teacher, but the school is destroyed after the Russian shelling. The residents have scattered all over Ukraine, some ended up in Western Europe. But the children want to learn in the “old” school they attended before the war. So I teach and they learn online.”
Russian forces entered a deserted Dovhenke in mid-April. During the six-months of occupation, all the houses were looted and then destroyed. Not a single house remained intact in Dovhenke. There is no gas, electricity nor drinking water in the village. Wells are contaminated with debris.
The retreating Russian army laid land mines in fields, roads and even in the cemetery. There are various unexploded ordinates, anti-personnel and anti-tank mines and explosive booby traps in and around the village.
Today, about 40 people have returned to live in the village. Others, despite the perils they face, dream of returning to their homes, yearning that the village will be rebuilt. They hope their billboard will help make their dream become a reality.
11/11/2023 – Dmytro stands in the destroyed shell of the village’s cultural house, where films were shown and various events were held.
“Before the invasion, before the war, there were about 450 people living in the village, now there are about 40 of us here. We had everything in the village, two schools, this cultural center, a polyclinic, a library… Everything was destroyed by Katsabs” (Katsap is an ironic, insulting and even chauvinistic slang term to describe Russians, and means butcher or knacker), says Dmytro.
Nataliya and her husband Viktor stand in front of their damaged house.
“We built the house ourselves; I kept improving the interior, and now we out it is nothing but ruins”, says Nataliya. “We ran away from the occupation in March 2022 when the Russians started shooting at us. Now we live in Izyum and we come here to collect metal scrap. You know, the pension is small, so we earn extra money by collecting metal scrap around our destroyed house.”
Excellent reportage, my compliments. Just a quick note: you wrote “a 200 tons Silitra bomb” but such a weight for aircraft bombs has never exixsted. I suppose that you meant to write 200 kg. , that’s possibly the correct size of such a weapon.
I wish all the best to you and youtìr country: you have been a sacrifical victim of the Nato expansion.
The bomb was probably FAB 500 and it hit Silitra chemical,which is used in farming…therefore was difficult to identified what kind of bomb was used. caption will be changed I hope
Dear Ruggero, thank you for your comment. I am not Ukrainian I am Czech-Canadian photojournalist. I am going to Ukraine since 90′, Ukraine is in my heart.