MODRYCHI, Ukraine — For two years, a devoted father has stayed by the side of his bedridden son, a Ukrainian soldier who suffered a severe brain injury. Passing through hospitals and rehabilitation centers, the father finds joy in every small victory of his 36-year-old son: a smile, a new word, an unexpected movement.
These milestones mark progress that the doctors doubted would ever come.
The Associated Press reported on Vitalii Shumei's story one and a half years ago, and it went viral. It brought attention of many across the world, including Ukrainian soccer club Shakhtar Donetsk, which offered to pay for the expensive treatment that Shumei badly needed.
Shumei, an anti-aircraft missile commander, was wounded in August 2022 while fighting in the Donetsk region, which remains the hottest part of the 1,000-kilometer-long (more than 600-mile) front line in Ukraine. Shumei defended Avdiivka, a city that has since fallen to Russian forces. The battle for Bakhmut, the longest of the war, had just begun at the time of his injury.
Now, Russian troops are advancing toward another major city, Pokrovsk, where the battle is likely to be as grinding and brutal as those for other cities in the Donetsk region.
But ultimately the price for the slow advance of Russian forces in the Donetsk region pay the soldiers and their families in the war, where dozens of thousands have been killed and wounded.
''We've already started to make some progress, if only his legs would start working,'' said Serhii Shumei, his 65-year-old father. ''Soon we'll be walking and we'll go to the gym every day.''
In their room at the rehabilitation centre in Modrychi of Western Ukraine there are two beds. Vitalii Shumei sleeps by the window, and his father rests opposite him.