close
close

Ukraine War: I married the love of my life in a bunker in Mariupol. Two days later he was killed

Image source, Valeria Subotina

Image description, Andriy and Valeria’s dreams of a shared future were destroyed by the invasion of Russia

Mariupol was doomed. The relentless Russian bombings had turned streets into ruins and courtyards into cemeteries.

But a few meters underground, in the southeastern Ukrainian city, a romance blossomed.

Valeria Subotina, 33, had sought shelter in the huge Azovstal steel plant, the city’s last stronghold, when it was surrounded by Russian forces in the spring of 2022.

She had sought shelter deep beneath the industrial plant in one of the dozens of Soviet-era air raid shelters designed to withstand a nuclear war.

  • Author, Diana Kuryshko
  • Role, BBC Ukraine

“You go down a half-collapsed staircase, move through corridors and tunnels and go further and further down. Finally you reach this concrete cube, a room,” says Valeria.

In the bunker, Valeria worked alongside soldiers and civilians as a press officer with the army’s Azov Brigade, informing the world media about the horrors of the months-long siege of Russia.

Also there was her fiancé Andriy Subotin, a 34-year-old Ukrainian army officer who defended the plant.

Image source, Dmytro Kosatsky

Image description, Deep beneath the Azovstal steelworks are over 30 bunkers from the Soviet era

The two had met about three years before the siege through their work with the border guards in Mariupol.

When Andriy met Valeria, it was love at first sight.

“He was special, it was so warm to be around him,” says Valeria. “He was always friendly and never refused to help.”

Andriy was an optimist, she says. He knew how to be happy and found joy in little things: sunny weather, smiles, the company of friends.

“On the first day we met, I realized that Andriy was completely different from the others.”

Within three months they moved in together and rented a small one-story house with a garden in Mariupol. The couple began to build a life together.

“We traveled a lot, went to the mountains, met friends,” says Valeria.

“We went fishing together and spent a lot of time outdoors. We went to the theater, concerts and exhibitions. Life was full.”

They decided to get married and dreamed of a big church wedding with family and friends. They picked out wedding rings.

Valeria quit her job and began to cultivate her creative side, writing and publishing poems about the earlier years of bitter fighting with Russia in Mariupol.

“A few years before the large-scale invasion, I was really happy,” she recalls.

In February 2022 everything changed.

Spring had brought the sun into Valeria and Andriy’s garden and the first flowers appeared.

“I started to enjoy the spring,” says Valeria. “We knew about Putin’s threats and we knew there would be a war, but I didn’t want to think about it.”

A few days before February 24, the day the full-scale invasion began, Andriy urged Valeria to leave the city. She refused.

“I knew that no matter what happened, I had to be in Mariupol and defend my city.”

Weeks later, they were both underground, in the Azovstal bunkers.

They only saw each other occasionally, but when they did, they were moments of “pure happiness.”

Image source, Valeria Subotina

At that time, Mariupol was on the verge of a humanitarian catastrophe.

Infrastructure strikes had disrupted water and electricity supplies in parts of the city and there were food shortages. Civilian houses and buildings had also been destroyed.

On April 15, a large bomb was dropped on the power plant. Valeria narrowly escaped death.

“I was found among corpses, the only survivor. On the one hand a miracle, but on the other hand a terrible tragedy.”

Suffering from a severe concussion, she had to spend eight days in an underground hospital at the plant.

“The smell of blood and decay was everywhere,” she says.

“It was a very frightening place. Our wounded comrades with amputated limbs were lying everywhere. They could not be properly cared for because there were very few medical supplies.”

Andriy was very worried after Valeria’s injury and started planning the wedding while still in the bunker.

“It felt like he was in a hurry, like we didn’t have any time left,” says Valeria.

“He made a couple of wedding rings out of aluminum foil with his own hands and proposed to me. Of course I said yes.

“He was the love of my life. And our aluminum foil rings – they were perfect.”

Image source, Valeria Subotina

Image description, Andriy and Valeria were married in an improvised underground ceremony in the bunker, with rings made of aluminum foil

On May 5, the couple was married by a commander stationed at the plant. The ceremony took place in the bunker and the two wore their uniforms as wedding attire.

Andriy promised his wife that when they returned they would have a real wedding, with real rings and a white dress.

Two days later, on May 7, he was killed by Russian artillery fire at the steel mill.

Valeria didn’t find out about it right away.

“People often say that you feel something inside when a loved one dies. But I was in a good mood, on the contrary. I was married and in love.”

The hardest thing for her was to keep a “lump of grief” inside her while she defended her city together with “her boys” – comrades – in Azov Valley.

“I was a bride, I was a wife and now I’m a widow. The scariest word,” she says.

“I couldn’t react the way I wanted to at that moment.

“My boys were always there. They sat next to me, they slept next to me, they brought me food and supported me,” she says. “I could only cry when they weren’t looking.”

video subtitles, Drone footage shows extent of devastation in Mariupol

At some point she felt that her grief lessened the fear of being in the war zone.

“I didn’t care… You just have to understand that in the next world, if there is one, there will be a lot more people waiting for you than here with you.”

The Ukrainian soldiers in Azovstal finally surrendered on May 20. Valeria was one of the 900 prisoners of war that the Russian military forcibly abducted from Mariupol.

“We stared through the windows of the bus at the buildings we loved, the streets we knew so well. They were destroying and killing everything I loved – my city, my friends and my husband.”

Valeria survived eleven months of Russian captivity and reported torture and mistreatment. Andriy often appeared to her in her dreams.

In April last year, she was released as part of a prisoner exchange and is now back in Ukraine.

It is difficult to say how many people were killed by the Russian shelling of Mariupol, but local authorities say the number is over 20,000.

According to the UN, 90 percent of residential buildings were damaged or destroyed, and bodies still lie in the rubble.

As far as Valeria knows, her husband’s body is still in the Azovstal steelworks in the now occupied city.

Sometimes, she says, she looks up at the sky and talks to it.

Image source, Dmytro Kosatsky