A Mariupol Theater Survivor Describes Attack That Buried Her Daughter in Rubble, and Killed Up to 300 People

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Victoria Dubovitskiy only took shelter at the Donetsk Regional Drama Theater in Mariupol because her daughter Anastasia got sick. After weeks of siege, bombing, and shelling by Russian troops, the southeast Ukrainian city had no electricity.

“I didn’t even ask myself if it was safe or not,” she tells TIME. “I just came to protect the kids.”

With freezing cold temperatures, Dubovitskiy took daughter Anastasia, 2, and son Artem, 6, there to be warm on Mar. 5—alongside hundreds of other residents. To alert Russian troops that the theater was being used to house families, the word “CHILDREN” was painted outside, in white letters big enough to be seen from the air.

Dubovitskiy remembers that Mar. 16 was remarkably quiet—with no shelling, and only a few planes overhead. Her family originally took shelter on the ground floor of the theater, but because Anastasia was ill—a doctor at the theater told her it was pneumonia—they were given a room on the second floor.

Then, suddenly, a blast hit the theater. “There was an explosion, a wave,” says Dubovitskiy. The blast knocked her across their room, and collapsed a wall onto Anastasia’s bed: “I touched the bed where she was sleeping, and I could not find her,” she says. “There was only rubble.”

She groped in the darkness for minutes. Finally, over the shouts of other victims, she heard Anastasia call out, “Mama! Mamouchka!” She searched the rubble with her hands and finally felt her daughter’s jacket and pulled her out.

Dubovitskiy says Anastasia was only saved because of blankets that were piled next to her, which covered her and helped protect her from the rubble.

At least 500 civilians, including women and children, were in the theater, including in the basement, when it was attacked, according to Human Rights Watch. The Ukrainian government blamed Russia for the attack, and local officials in Mariupol say 300 people died after the theater was reduced to rubble—though details have not been independently confirmed

Dubovitskiy and her family are lucky. Authorities say just 130 people were rescued from the theater. After the attack, the family was able to evacuate to the relative safety of western Ukraine. The effects of the attack, however, are lasting, especially on little Anastasia, who has not left her mother’s side.

“I could not leave her at an arm’s length distance. She wanted to stay in my hands,” Dubovitskiy says. “She cried, she shouted and she did not sleep.”

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Write to Francesca Trianni at francesca.trianni@time.com.

Victoria Dubovitskiy only took shelter at the Donetsk Regional Drama Theater in Mariupol because her daughter Anastasia got sick. After weeks of siege, bombing, and shelling by Russian troops, the southeast Ukrainian city had no electricity. “I didn’t even ask myself if it was safe or not,” she tells TIME. “I just came to protect the kids.” With freezing cold temperatures, Dubovitskiy took daughter Anastasia, 2, and son Artem, 6, there to be warm on Mar. 5—alongside hundreds of other residents. To alert Russian troops that the theater was being used to house families, the word “CHILDREN” was painted outside, in white letters big enough to be seen from the air. Dubovitskiy remembers that Mar. 16 was remarkably quiet—with no shelling, and only a few planes overhead. Her family originally took shelter on the ground floor of the theater, but because Anastasia was ill—a doctor at the theater told her it was pneumonia—they were given a room on the second floor. Then, suddenly, a blast hit the theater. “There was an explosion, a wave,” says Dubovitskiy. The blast knocked her across their room, and collapsed a wall onto Anastasia’s bed: “I touched the bed where she was sleeping, and I could not find her,” she says. “There was only rubble.” She groped in the darkness for minutes. Finally, over the shouts of other victims, she heard Anastasia call out, “Mama! Mamouchka!” She searched the rubble with her hands and finally felt her daughter’s jacket and pulled her out. Dubovitskiy says Anastasia was only saved because of blankets that were piled next to her, which covered her and helped protect her from the rubble. At least 500 civilians, including women and children, were in the theater, including in the basement, when it was attacked, according to Human Rights Watch. The Ukrainian government blamed Russia for the attack, and local officials in Mariupol say 300 people died after the theater was reduced to rubble—though details have not been independently confirmed Dubovitskiy and her family are lucky. Authorities say just 130 people were rescued from the theater. After the attack, the family was able to evacuate to the relative safety of western Ukraine. The effects of the attack, however, are lasting, especially on little Anastasia, who has not left her mother’s side. “I could not leave her at an arm’s length distance. She wanted to stay in my hands,” Dubovitskiy says. “She cried, she shouted and she did not sleep.” More Must-Read Stories From TIME How We Chose the TIME100 Most Influential Companies Ukrainian Museums Are Racing to Save Artifacts That Tell the Country’s Story Back-to-Office Pressure Is Creating a Crisis for Long COVID Patients Inside the Capitol Hill Staffers’ Effort to Unionize Congress Someone Is Killing the Wild Horses of Arizona. One Woman Is Determined to Find Out Who ‘Is Gaining Knowledge a Sin?’ Afghan Girls Contemplate a Future Without Schools After the Taliban Backtracks How The Biden Administration Contradicts Itself on Key Immigration Policies Why Crypto Scams Are Driving an Online Crime Boom—And How to Outsmart Them Write to Francesca Trianni at francesca.trianni@time.com.

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