BSS
  04 Jul 2023, 23:53

Kyiv bids farewell to writer killed in Russian strike

 KYIV, Ukraine, July  4, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - Inside Kyiv's St Michael's
cathedral, mourners gathered Tuesday to bid farewell to Ukrainian writer
Victoria Amelina, who died of her wounds suffered in a Russian missile strike
on a restaurant.

 The coffin of the rising star in Ukrainian literature was placed at the
centre of the cathedral, draped with the blue-and-yellow national flag.

 The 37-year-old was dining at the Ria Pizza restaurant in Kramatorsk --
popular with journalists, the military and aid workers -- when a Russian strike
hit last week.

 She was seriously wounded and died in hospital four days later, one of 13
people, including three children, killed in the strike.

 Her family, including her 10-year-old son, as well as several writers and
journalists attended the ceremony. Her body will then be taken for burial in
her native city of Lviv in western Ukraine.

 A crying woman in dark sunglasses carried Amelina's portrait, a
youthful-looking woman with long blonde hair.

 She had written several adult and children's fiction books and was
reportedly working on her first non-fiction book, about women documenting
Russia's invasion.

 She had also set up a literary festival in the eastern Donetsk town of New
York -- the exact origins of the name are disputed -- which now lies on the
front line with Russia.

 Amelina also worked for a foundation called "Truth Hounds" that says it
carries out field missions to document Russian "war crimes" in Ukraine.

 Attending the funeral, the group's director Roman Avramenko said Amelina
"knew how to convey the truth to the large masses",

 "Thanks to her persistent work, the whole world continued to learn the
truth about this war, about Russia's aggression," he said.

 "But now we have lost this person."

 An Orthodox priest waved incense over her coffin and musicians played
Ukrainian folk instruments -- the kobza, sopilka and trembita -- singing words
by national poet Taras Shevchenko.
       
       - 'Beyond literature' -
       
 Amelina died of her wounds in a hospital in Dnipro, where she was
transported after the Kramatorsk strike.

The PEN Ukraine writers' association said she was dining with a delegation
of Colombian journalists at the pizzeria when the strike hit.

 In her last tweet, she shared a photo of Colombian writer Hector Abad
Faciolince embracing a Ukrainian librarian in the village of Kapytolivka,
recently reclaimed by Kyiv from Moscow's forces.

 Other recent social media posts showed her reciting her poetry at a
literary festival in Kyiv.

 PEN Ukraine praised her literary work as well as her aim to gather evidence
on Russian crimes in Ukraine.

"Since the beginning of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Victoria
Amelina has expanded her work far beyond literature," it said.

 Amelina was born in Lviv, western Ukraine, in the dying years of the Soviet
Union.

 PEN Ukraine said she had briefly moved to Canada -- home to a large
Ukrainian diaspora -- with her father, but later returned to her native city.

 According to Ukrainian organisations, she worked in Lviv's IT sector for a
decade before quitting the industry to focus on her writing.