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There was no medicine, so this Ukrainian nurse sang lullabies to wounded soldiers

Not long after Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, nurse Oksana Sokhan found herself in a darkened minibus, wedged between two stricken soldiers being evacuated from the front line.

The men were agitated and anxious, disoriented and determined to get up and move. Ms. Sokhan had no sedatives – but she had within her the key to calming them. She began singing Ukrainian lullabies to the wounded fighters, stroking them as a mother would.

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Among their many duties, nurses are relied upon to comfort, to soothe. Amid the stresses of Ukraine’s war, as she deals with wounded soldiers, Oksana Sokhan recalls a moment’s resourcefulness that still makes her smile.

Their anxiety eased.

“I was surprised myself that it worked – surely it worked on a subconscious level for both of them,” she recalls with an amused smile.

“I didn’t know what else to do; we didn’t have any medicine,” says the nurse, who carries herself with the confidence of someone playing a constant critical role, without fanfare, to save the lives of Ukraine’s war-wounded.

She still laughs about her serendipitous use of the lullabies in the minibus, and about how – after they had all arrived safely at the hospital – a nurse came out to report that one of the men was convinced his mother had been with him during the evacuation.

“In my real life I am not singing,” Ms. Sokhan says. “I don’t have a voice.”

From all her years of caring for wounded soldiers, the Ukrainian nurse recounts one transcendent moment of comfort she provided early in this war that she says she’ll never forget – and that made all the difference.

Not long after Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Oksana Sokhan found herself in an evacuation minibus, wedged between two stricken soldiers in the dark, as the vehicle tried to safely get away from the front line.

The wounded men were agitated and anxious, disoriented and determined to get up and move. Ms. Sokhan had no sedatives – but she had within her the key to calming them.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Among their many duties, nurses are relied upon to comfort, to soothe. Amid the stresses of Ukraine’s war, as she deals with wounded soldiers, Oksana Sokhan recalls a moment’s resourcefulness that still makes her smile.

She began singing Ukrainian lullabies to the wounded fighters, and stroking them as a mother would.

Their anxiety eased. If she stopped the soothing singing for a moment, she saw their anxiety surge again.

“I was surprised myself that it worked – surely it worked on a subconscious level for both of them,” recalls the nurse, who wears an amused smile, purple medical scrubs, and a dog tag on a chain.

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