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Son finally able to lay his mother to rest after Russian occupation forced him to bury her in his back yard in Irpin

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A Ukrainian man was finally able to lay his mother to rest properly after being forced to bury his dead mother in his back yard when Russian forces took over his town, Irpin.

Footage shot on Friday 22 April shows a group of men exhuming her body from its improvised grave and taking her to a dignified burial at a cemetery.

Vinnizka Zoya Pavlovna, Genadyi’s mother, lived through the German occupation of Ukraine as a child but endured the hell of war a second time over in old age.

She lived in Donetsk until Russian-backed separatists began their war with Ukrainian forces in 2014.

As they attempted to flee Eastern Ukraine, they were boarding a bus near the airport where they lived when gunfire erupted and the bus driver panicked. He started to drive before everyone was safely on board and Vinnizka was dragged under the wheels and severely injured.

She needed multiple surgeries and became fully disabled, eventually also being diagnosed with dementia.

They moved to Irpin three years ago, seeking refuge from the war-torn Donbas region, nearer the safer and more modern city of Kyiv.

During the early days of the 2022 invasion, as millions fled West from Kyiv and battles raged in the cities and towns just north of the capital, Genadyi was stuck in Irpin with his mother.

He said several people died just outside of their home.

Initially they were allowed to go outside and help the elderly, but it quickly became dangerous as Russian soldiers would shoot indiscriminately at whoever was outside, he said.

“On March 5th, a tank drove right in here, it was just destroying all the houses here. The house next door is completely burned down. He was just shooting at everything. Riding in circles and shooting for about 5 hours.”

No one could be buried so when Vinnizka Zoya Pavlovna finally passed away, hiding in her basement from another occupation of her country, Genadyi could only bury her in his enclosed backyard.

Now, a couple weeks after the Russians retreated from Irpin and Bucha, those who survived are left to put their lives back together.

“We used to pick up bodies that were laying on the side of the street, now we started on more difficult cases,” says Vlodomyr, who is exhuming Vinnizka’s body so it can be buried in a proper cemetery. “We personally are doing about three exhumations per day,” he said.

“People who raise their guns at other people, it’s incomprehensible,” says Genadyi, as his mother is buried on a grey, cold, and rainy morning.

“When I was in the USSR army, I was taught to help those weaker than me. Thats how I tried to lead my life: protecting the weak.”

Genadyi said his final goodbye, his mother's body now laying in Irpin cemetery, along with many other victims of this war.

Video by Oliya Scootercaster (FNTV Freedomnews.tv)

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