Ukrainians mark Easter with little faith in Russia truce


LUKASHIVKA, UKRAINE—Dozens of Ukrainians gathered outside the ruins of a damaged church in northern Ukraine on Sunday to mark Easter, doubting a ceasefire with Russia might be possible.
Russian President Vladimir Putin unilaterally announced a temporary Easter truce from Saturday evening to midnight following Easter Sunday, citing humanitarian reasons. This came a day after US President Donald Trump said negotiations between Ukraine and Russia are “coming to a head.”
Kyiv has voiced skepticism about the Easter ceasefire, saying it would only mirror a genuine halt in hostilities. Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reiterated Ukraine’s offer of a 30-day, full and unconditional ceasefire and called on Moscow to respond.
Zelenskyy said on Saturday night that Russian strikes continued, although with less intensity, particularly near the border where Ukrainian forces maintain footholds in Russia’s Kursk and Belgorod regions. Ukrainian soldiers interviewed by The Associated Press (AP) at various front-line positions confirmed the ongoing hostilities.
In the village of Lukashivka in the Chernihiv region, briefly occupied by Russian forces in 2022, parishioners of the damaged Ascension Church arrived early at a small makeshift wooden church built last year to cater to the needs of the faithful, holding traditional Easter baskets and cakes to have them blessed.
Scarred church
As the sun rose, they stood quietly in the spring chill, the roofless silhouette of the wrecked church behind them, its pale walls scarred by shell fragments.
The church’s priest, Serhii Zezul, walked among them, shouting “Christ is risen!” as he sprinkled holy water over the baskets—his voice nearly drowned out by the hum of a nearby generator.
The restoration of the original church, a 20th-century architectural landmark, would require at least hundreds of thousands of dollars—money the community doesn’t have as the war rages on.
Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, about 530 churches across Ukraine have been damaged or destroyed, and at least 25 clergy members have been killed, according to Ruslan Khalikov, head of the “Religion on Fire” project, which monitors Russian war crimes against religious communities.
“A destroyed church is a shattered soul of the community,” Zezul said. “When churches fall, the heart and core that unite people begin to collapse.”
More people than usual gathered in the damaged church’s courtyard on Sunday. Some said they drove from cities to Lukashivka to mark Easter, fearing Russian forces might target large gatherings, especially after a recent string of missile strikes killed dozens of civilians.
For 26 years, 44-year-old Olha Rudeno attended church in the nearby city of Chernihiv, where she got married.
“But given the war, it’s psychologically difficult for me to go where there are large gatherings in cities,” she said.
Rudeno doesn’t think a ceasefire with Russia will happen.
“Believing in a ceasefire is deceiving yourself. I don’t know how much time has to pass for me to truly believe one is possible,” she said.
Doubt of a truce between Russia and Ukraine has deepened as US-led efforts have so far yielded no breakthrough.