Pacifist who helped Ukrainians dies in jail
The Guardian Weekly|April 19, 2024
Schoolteacher Alexander Demidenko guided refugees back to their homeland until he was arrested and tortured in prison by Kremlin forces
Pjotr Sauer
Pacifist who helped Ukrainians dies in jail

Lost and disoriented, Olena Primak stood at Belgorod's train station, holding tightly to her young daughter's arm. The scorching summer heat and the long journey had left the Ukrainian refugee on the brink of collapse.

"Suddenly, a man with the most generous of smiles appeared," she said. With a gentle countenance, warm eyes and grey hair, the 61-year-old Alexander Demidenko approached Primak, offering to take her bags.

After living more than a year under Russian control in the southern Ukrainian town of Novaya Kakhovka, Primak, a former shopkeeper, decided in June 2023 that she could no longer bear foreign occupation. To get back to Ukrainian-controlled land, she had to cross the Kolotilovka checkpoint, the only passage for Ukrainians returning to their homeland. "Thank God

Alexander [Demidenko] was there to help us at the end of it." Since the start of the war more than two years ago, a discreet network of unofficial Russian volunteers like Demidenko has sprung up helping tens of thousands of Ukrainian refugees displaced by the war get out of Russia.

The volunteers, often ordinary anti-war Russians, operate largely through word of mouth and groups on the Telegram messaging app.

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