UAVoyager🇺🇦 Profile picture
May 28 6 tweets 3 min read Read on X
This isn’t just a soldier. This is a legend.

471 days of hell without rotation.

Serhii "Wind" Tishchenko, a combat medic of Ukraine’s 30th Brigade, held a position near Soledar from August 13, 2024 to October 28, 2025 — just a few hundred meters from russian forces.

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While others rotated out — he stayed.

When communication was cut, they recorded video messages for families on flash drives and passed them through “live messenger backpacks” with powerbanks along the road.
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He dug a 6-meter-deep well under the position so they would have water. They drank unfiltered water from it.

For months, he moved on his knees — until they were covered in blood.

He lived in a tiny bunker beneath an asphalt road, repeatedly hit by drones and artillery.
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Under constant fire, he evacuated wounded brothers-in-arms.

Not endurance. Not luck.

Just survival in conditions most people can’t even imagine.

And still — he stayed.
He lived in a tiny bunker beneath an asphalt road.
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Before the war, he was a veterinarian with 20 years of experience. A father of five.

After 471 days in the trench, he had to relearn how to walk upright — and how to live in normal light again.
The hardest part, he says, wasn’t the fighting — it was returning to normal life.
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On December 5, 2025, he was awarded the title Hero of Ukraine.

Ukraine stands because of people like Serhii "Wind" Tishchenko.

Men who endured the unimaginable — and never abandoned their position.

Glory to the Hero.
Glory to Ukraine’s defenders. Image

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More from @NAFOvoyager

May 23
May 23 is the Heroes of Ukraine Day.

We remember those who gave their lives for Ukraine — and those still fighting.

Soldiers. Medics. Pilots. Poets.
Ordinary people who became legends.

This thread is about them.
Remember them.

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IIvan Zubkov “Krab”

Senior lieutenant, one of the legendary “Cyborgs.”

Killed in the ruins of Donetsk Airport on January 20, 2015 — during one of the fiercest battles of the war.

One of the earliest symbols of Ukrainian resilience.

Hero of Ukraine (posthumously)

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Vitalii Skakun

Marine combat engineer.

On February 24, 2022, near Henichesk, he blew up a bridge to stop a russian tank column.

Last words: “I’m blowing up the bridge with me on it.”

He was just 25.

First Hero of Ukraine of the full-scale invasion (posthumously).

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Read 12 tweets
May 20
Three different families.
Three different lives.
And three empty graves left behind.

This is what russian war leaves behind in Ukraine.

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On April 15, 2022, combat medic Olena Kushnir-Novitska was inside Azovstal treating the wounded when a three-ton bomb tore through several floors.

Her parents were left with almost nothing. In the urn, they placed only her medical coat and her favorite beaded sandals.

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26-year-old Azov fighter Bohdan Demchuk was killed alongside seven brothers-in-arms when their vehicle was hit twice.

His 8-year-old son placed his father’s single gray sock and a handful of soil from the front line into the grave.
He had nothing else left.

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Read 5 tweets
May 13
Zakhar Biriukov, 37. Callsign: “Berkut.”

A veteran of Ukraine’s SOF.
Sniper. Combat engineer. Diver.

He dreamed of a peaceful life with his wife Yulia.

Then came russia.

This story is not about what war took from him.
It’s about what it couldn’t take away.

1/6
July 17, 2022. A UAV operation. Then — an explosion.

“My hands were blown off instantly…” Zakhar recalls.

He lost both arms, his right leg, one eye, and part of his hearing.

He survived a coma.
Dozens of surgeries.

Most people would break.

Zakhar started over.

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Through it all, Yulia stayed by his side.
His wife. His support.

The person who never left him for a second.

From intensive care to the first steps of a new life, she was there.

Zakhar says:
“A soldier’s wife is endless love and strength.”

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Read 6 tweets
May 5
“Everything was covered with beds, bodies, parts of bodies, limbs, and fire everywhere.”
— this is the testimony of Oleksandr Verengotov, an Azov fighter who survived the Olenivka terrorist attack and russian captivity.

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“I was already asleep when I heard the explosion. I opened my eyes — dust, noise. Then a second blast.”

And then:
“Everything started burning.”
“I woke up and my sleeping bag was already on fire.”
Smoke everywhere. Flames all around.

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“At first, I didn’t even understand this wasn’t just shelling.”

“Everything was on fire. Beds twisted, the ceiling burning, people screaming.”

He climbed down from the upper bunk straight into chaos.

“Bodies, metal, debris — everything was mixed together.”

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Read 8 tweets
May 2
Since 02.05.2014, russians have been melting down.

12 years ago they tried to seize Odesa.

Ukrainians pushed them back.

Pro-russian groups panicked, fled and torched their own building.

For years they blamed Ukraine.
This thread shows what actually happened.

1/6
Here is one of the so-called “peaceful activists” — Gennady Kushnarev, wearing a russian imperial flag patch.

A russian from Chelyabinsk posing as a “native Odesa citizen”.

He called for killing Odesa residents who rejected the claim that “Odesa is a russian city.”

2/6
Here is another so-called “peaceful activist” — russian neo-Nazi Raevsky, posing in front of the Trade Unions House in Odesa and walking through the city in military camouflage with members of the neo-Nazi group “Chornosotentsi” (Черносотенці).

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Read 6 tweets
Apr 26
russia is abducting Ukrainian children — and erasing their identity.

This is not collateral damage.

It’s a deliberate state policy.

International investigations, testimonies, and Ukrainian data all point to the same conclusion.
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The UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine found that these deportations are
— war crimes
— and crimes against humanity

At least 1,205 verified cases confirm: this is organized, not accidental.
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Children are taken without parents being informed.

Their whereabouts are hidden.

There is no real mechanism to bring them back.

Instead, they are placed in russia — in families or institutions.
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Read 7 tweets

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