Woman Who Lost 6 Family Members Now Helps Refugees at Ukraine Train Station
Woman Who Lost 6 Family Members Now Helps Refugees at Ukraine Train Station

By Ivan Pentchoukov

LVIV, Ukraine—The Pryimenko family’s bags had been packed for five days on March 7, when Russia and Ukraine negotiated a green corridor for civilians to flee Sumy, which would open the next morning.

Vitaliy and Yekaterina Pryimenko had been waiting for a day to flee with their three sons, aged Kiril, 5, Yegor, 10, and Artem, 15. They stayed put, having heard stories of civilian vehicles being shot at as they tried to escape Sumy, a city in east Ukraine which is less than 25 miles from the Russian border.

Vitaliy’s mother, Valentina Pryimenko, refused to go. On the evening of March 7, she reluctantly agreed to flee after a phone call with her daughter, Anna Pryimenko, who had already fled to western Ukraine.

Roughly two hours later, a bomb blast killed the entire family, reducing their two-story house to rubble.

Five of the six members of the Pryimenko family who were killed in an aerial strike on March 7, 2022, as part of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. (Courtesy Anna Pryimenko)

Anna Pryimenko’s phone rang at around midnight. Her brother’s friends told her of the bombing. She called her mother first. There was no answer. A stranger picked up the phone when she called her brother. The phone was blown out of the house and landed on the street.

“They said there was no house, not even the foundation. There was nothing left,” Pryimenko told The Epoch Times.

Sumy has been surrounded by active fighting since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine, which he calls a “special military operation.”

On the morning of March 8, local media reported that nine people, including two children, were killed in the bombing. The preliminary numbers gave Anna hope, but it faded quickly.

“There were a lot of people hurt and I hoped until the end that at least some of the children survived. During the day, they found all of them and they were all mine,” Pryimenko said.

“It was terrible, especially because we were so close. We had very strong family ties, a big, friendly family.”

The Pryimenko house stood on Romenskaya Street deep inside a densely populated area of Sumy made up of mostly single-family homes. The house was set 100 feet from the street. The front yard had stone paths, which were, during the warm months of the year, bordered with trimmed lawn.

None of that remained after the bombing, according to videos and images of the scene taken on the morning after the bombing. Large fragments of concrete and brick lay strewn throughout, powdered with snow that had fallen overnight.

Pryimenko desperately wanted to return to Sumy to bury her loved ones. Her brother’s friends convinced her otherwise. The friends took care of the burial.

“They convinced me not to do it because it would be a one-way ticket,” she said.

Her 15-year-old nephew, Artem Pryimenko, was a national champion in sambo wrestling before he died. He was planning to compete in an international competition before the bomb killed him and his parents.

Artem Pryimenko (center) stand atop a podium after winning a sambo wrestling competition. (Courtesy Anna Pryimenko)

“The children, they hadn’t had time to do anything bad to anyone yet,” Anna Pryimenko said. “It’s so painful and so hard to understand why this happened to my family.”

Anna Pryimenko and her husband have since moved from Uzhgorod in western Ukraine to Lviv. They volunteer at the Lviv Train Terminal every other day. Anna said the volunteering helps keep her mind off the losses.

On March 16, she worked in a hall at the train station dedicated to mothers with small children passing through Lviv. Most are on their way to Poland, fleeing hard-hit areas in east Ukraine, including Sumy.

It’s hard to look at the children, she said.

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