At the start of the full-scale invasion, Hlib was only 17. He was studying at a college in Dnipro when the morning of February 24 began not with the usual alarm clock, but with explosions and the news that a full-scale war had begun. Right from his dormitory window, he saw missiles flying towards the Pivdenmash plant. Hlib took a chance and returned to his native Pavlohrad, but there was no peace there either: explosions, destruction, the first shelling. He started volunteering – he was one of the first to take animals out of the danger zone after the Kakhovka dam was blown up, working to the limit of his human capabilities. Now Hlib lives in Kyiv and dreams of one thing – at least a month of silence in the sky over Ukraine.







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