The Sun has Set Over Kyiv on the 1432nd Day of the Full-Scale Invasion. Polina fled occupied Crimea rather than accept Moscow-appointed rule. Now she plans to join the army.

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  1. frontliner_ukraine on

    In temporarily occupied Crimea, Russian security forces routinely pursue residents for their pro-Ukrainian stance, fabricating charges, exerting pressure, intimidating families and restricting their freedom of movement. Despite this, a generation of young Ukrainians is choosing resistance over submission and life under the Russian flag. Polina Kustariova spent years watching everything Ukrainian pushed out, before fleeing in secret.

    To stay was to submit

    Twenty-year-old Polina also grew up in Crimea and lived there for almost 12 years after the occupation began. During that time, she moved between four cities — Kerch, Yalta, Simferopol and Sevastopol — and came to realise that any sense of home had already disappeared for her back in 2014. She remembers the change of flags and the street protests in Kerch.  

    From then on, she lived in an environment where everything Ukrainian was systematically pushed out. For a long time, she tried to learn the Ukrainian language on her own. In literature classes, she spoke about Ukrainian poetry; in history lessons, she argued for the preservation and promotion of Ukrainian culture.

    “I have never questioned which country I belong to, or which country I consider my homeland,” Polina says, reflecting on what shaped her civic position.

    Even so, she understood that under occupation she had no power to change anything. Staying would have meant accepting the actions of an authority appointed by Moscow. She therefore waited until she came of age before leaving Crimea in secret, without telling her parents. She says they hold pro-Russian views and would not have supported her decision.

    “Travelling via Belarus was too risky. And when you live in Crimea,” she adds wryly, “you do not put much faith in promises of humanitarian corridors.” She decided instead to travel to Kazakhstan, carrying an expired Russian passport and a Ukrainian birth certificate.

    What followed was an appeal to the Ukrainian consulate. She admits she was effectively treated there as a Russian citizen. Polina sought alternative routes — through volunteers, the Office of the President of Ukraine in Crimea and the ombudsman. Only after appeals to the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs was her identity confirmed and a document issued allowing her to return to Ukraine. The journey home took almost two months: Kazakhstan, Turkey, Moldova and only then Ukraine. Polina arrived in Kyiv in December 2025.

    “I sent my mum a photo from Maidan and said: ‘Mum, I’m in Ukraine, you can start panicking now,’” she recalls.

    Read the article here – 

    [https://frontliner.ua/en/how-young-crimeans-were-forced-to-flee-the-occupied-peninsula/#](https://frontliner.ua/en/how-young-crimeans-were-forced-to-flee-the-occupied-peninsula/#

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  2. 🙏🏼Polina

    1/25/26

    Day 14301(4458)
    Stay Strong Ukraine
    We believe in you

    🇺🇦Слава Україні 🇺🇦
    Sláva Ukraíni!
    Heroyam Slava!
    🙏🏽 🇺🇦 💙 💛