This is how Ukrainian soldier Oleksandr Kiriienko looked before he was captured by the Russians. And this is how he looks now. He spent nearly 3 years in captivity.
Glad the internet exists so such things can never be buried.
Rat bastard muscovian scum
I am sure he will get his glorious mustache back soon.
For the sake of humanity I hope that the perpetrators of these abuses are hunted down and prosecuted.
Keep the faith- glory to Ukraine
Slava Ukraini
i would gladly buy this guy a big steak!
He’s very lucky, and he knows it! Not to be dark, but I’m curious if soldiers who have experienced such captivity if they are asked to return to the front?
Before captivity: ZZ-Top
After captivity: Moby
——————————–
Joking aside, welcome back good sir!
I don’t even want to imagine what he went through.
My own grandfather was captured by Russia in the 1950’s during the Hungarian revolution as a resistance fighter against Russian occupation, and the things he had to go through in those Russian camps:
——————————–
– His weight dropped from being a “big guy” down to probably around 80 to 90 pounds, and as such was always so hungry.
– For example, he had to eat moths flying around a light at night to get at least a little protein.
– The only moments he would get elated or excited or happy, was sometimes when he found a “nice juicy” ground worm and would grab it and scoff it right down.
– He would also eat and suck on grass blades to get some extra water and juices of any type.
– He also ate any other insects within sight to survive the experience, including roaches, beetles, and even mosquitoes that would latch onto him, etc…
– Once, when he talked back to the Russian camp-commander one morning and made a joke against him, and everyone laughed… Ya… You can imagine the commander didn’t find it so funny. So they called him to the front and then chopped off one of his fingers.
– Before being captured he played the violin amazingly and beautifully, but he never played again after he left the Russian camp, with his finger lost.
– He saw horrific unbelievable tortures by the Russian soldiers that would go on, that I want to tell you about, but I’m afraid to tell you about it, because it would give you nightmares for days and days, the way it did me…
🙁
– After all that, thank God he managed to escape and make it to Canada/America… Where I was eventually born…
——————————–
Anyways… Just glad this Ukrainian soldier survived Russia in the 2020’s, the way my Grandpa did in the 1950’s.
70 years later give or take, and the Russian people are still treating their neighbors the EXACT SAME WAY.
Russia hasn’t changed in all that time.
And Amnesia International has said something about it?
Fucking hell
This hero smiles, almost laughs, but I haven’t seen a single russian scoundrel smile when he returns to Mordor for the prisoner exchanges. Why?
15 comments
This is how Ukrainian soldier Oleksandr Kiriienko looked before he was captured by the Russians. And this is how he looks now. He spent nearly 3 years in captivity.
Glad the internet exists so such things can never be buried.
Rat bastard muscovian scum
I am sure he will get his glorious mustache back soon.
For the sake of humanity I hope that the perpetrators of these abuses are hunted down and prosecuted.
Keep the faith- glory to Ukraine
Slava Ukraini
i would gladly buy this guy a big steak!
He’s very lucky, and he knows it! Not to be dark, but I’m curious if soldiers who have experienced such captivity if they are asked to return to the front?
Before captivity: ZZ-Top
After captivity: Moby
——————————–
Joking aside, welcome back good sir!
I don’t even want to imagine what he went through.
My own grandfather was captured by Russia in the 1950’s during the Hungarian revolution as a resistance fighter against Russian occupation, and the things he had to go through in those Russian camps:
——————————–
– His weight dropped from being a “big guy” down to probably around 80 to 90 pounds, and as such was always so hungry.
– For example, he had to eat moths flying around a light at night to get at least a little protein.
– The only moments he would get elated or excited or happy, was sometimes when he found a “nice juicy” ground worm and would grab it and scoff it right down.
– He would also eat and suck on grass blades to get some extra water and juices of any type.
– He also ate any other insects within sight to survive the experience, including roaches, beetles, and even mosquitoes that would latch onto him, etc…
– Once, when he talked back to the Russian camp-commander one morning and made a joke against him, and everyone laughed… Ya… You can imagine the commander didn’t find it so funny. So they called him to the front and then chopped off one of his fingers.
– Before being captured he played the violin amazingly and beautifully, but he never played again after he left the Russian camp, with his finger lost.
– He saw horrific unbelievable tortures by the Russian soldiers that would go on, that I want to tell you about, but I’m afraid to tell you about it, because it would give you nightmares for days and days, the way it did me…
🙁
– After all that, thank God he managed to escape and make it to Canada/America… Where I was eventually born…
——————————–
Anyways… Just glad this Ukrainian soldier survived Russia in the 2020’s, the way my Grandpa did in the 1950’s.
70 years later give or take, and the Russian people are still treating their neighbors the EXACT SAME WAY.
Russia hasn’t changed in all that time.
And Amnesia International has said something about it?
Fucking hell
This hero smiles, almost laughs, but I haven’t seen a single russian scoundrel smile when he returns to Mordor for the prisoner exchanges. Why?
russian diet
Oh hell! Putin is going to hell!
Eventually born??
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