Ruminations

Blog dedicated primarily to randomly selected news items; comments reflecting personal perceptions

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Front Lines Pregnant With New Life

"If a man hesitates whether to make a shot or not, a woman will never. Maybe that's why women are the ones giving birth, not men."
"[Being a sniper is particularly difficult, mentally and physically]...Because you can see what is going on. You can see hitting a target. This is a personal hell for everyone who sees that in a [sniper's] scope." 
"For 30 seconds I was shaking - my whole body - and I couldn't stop it. That realization that now you'll do something that will be a point of no return."
"But we didn't come to them with a war. They came to us."
"When I had just joined the special forces, one of the fighters came to me and said: 'Girl, what are you doing here? Go and cook borshch'. I felt so offended at that moment I thought, 'are you kidding me? I can be in the kitchen, but I can also knock you out'!"
"I came to my commander and I asked him, 'what can I do the best?' He said: 'You will be a sniper.'" 
Evgeniya Emerald, sniper in a Ukraine battalion
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Evgeniya Emerald, pictured with her three-month-old baby, ran a jewellery business before the war
 
"It's terrifying -- every single day. You wake up wondering if everything is OK, if everyone is still alive [following nightly explosions]."
"You're constantly thinking about your child's well-being [as a pregnant soldier on the battlefield]. It was nonstop stress every day, combined with constant physical activity."
Nadia, 25, front-line radio operator 
 
"We have to protect our children. And we have to liberate the country for their future."
"I'm ready to assume responsibility that I am near the combat zone [pregnant] with my child. I do everything to protect her." 
"This is a long game, so we are needed."
Olya, 39, combat medic in Ukraine  
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Kateryna Pryimak with fellow sisters from the Veteranka movement. Photo source: Women Veterans Movement. Ukrainer 
 
Women serving in some countries while at war see themselves removed from combat zones, but Ukrainian women in the military generally serve until they reach their seventh month of pregnancy in a military apparatus that the medical community and soldiers alike admit the Ukrainian military is ill-equipped to support their pregnant female soldiers. It starts with the uniforms they're given, not meant to clothe a pregnant woman and goes on to a deficit in neo-natal care during a costly war.
 
Pregnant Ukrainian soldiers -- hardships aside -- feel motivated to serve for a very good reason -- concern over Ukraine's future. "Our children are the future of this country", emphasized Olya, 39, Ukrainian combat medic, whose daughter was born in late May. And once a child is born their military mothers face another dilemma... how long they should remain at home with their babies before resuming their military position during a time of intense conflict. 
 
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Zemliachky has bought and sent about 30 military uniforms to pregnant soldiers since the war began, the organization's founders said. Courtesy of Zemliachky
 
Following her baby's birth, Nadia explained that she was given 126 days of paid leave should she wish to return to the front. The alternative was to take three years unpaid leave, to raise her child in infancy. She chose the three years. She had worked as a front-line radio operator until she reached eight-and-a-half months in her pregnancy. She experienced how difficult a pregnancy can be under those circumstances. 
The clinic she relied upon for ultrasounds had closed. 
 
This is a brutal war, with many servicemen on both sides wounded or losing their lives. Lost lives in the tens of thousands for both Ukraine and Russia. The Ukrainian military, like Russia's, has experienced great difficulties in their recruitment efforts among young men. The women who join the military are all volunteers; their willingness to serve is a counterpoint to that of the men who are expected to serve. Since the Russian invasion of their country in 2022, the number of women serving has grown to 70,000.
 
The experience is not a salutary one by any means. Conditions are fairly tough under relentless shelling, having to live without heat n the winter, and the absence of running water and toilets. Major Viktoria Kravchenko is a psychologist whose 16 years of service in the military has given her ample opportunity to research sexism in her nation's armed forces. Women who become pregnant, she affirms, can face barriers; commanders who question their decision to return to the fray following birth, much less their fitness to serve.
 
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It soon became clear that servicewomen needed a lot more than uniforms. Everything from smaller boots to lighter plates for bulletproof vests to hygiene products is in demand.
 
"It's no secret that gender bias exists", she states. Giving support to female enlistees there are private entities. Zemliachky is a group that produces maternity uniforms for female soldiers. Another, Kvitna, offers women's health care from a mobile clinic. "There was an urgent need", explained Taras Yeftemii, a gynecologist with Kvitna. The mobile clinic screened 573 female soldiers on a recent rotation, five of whom were pregnant.  
 
Initially, Olya, the senior combat medic, fearful that she might get reassigned, told no one of her pregnant state. A bleeding incident put her in hospital, finally forcing Olya to inform her commander of her pregnancy. She was advised by medical staff to "take it easy"; an order difficult to comply with since she was the sole medic in her company. The issue was partially solved when her commander arranged for Olya to refrain from entering combat positions.  
 
A two-day-old baby with eyes closed holding an adult’s finger.
At hospitals in Ukraine, women and hospital staff face terrible danger: circling drones, artillery, ballistic missiles and the targeted degradation of healthcare infrastructure.
 

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