Ukrainian defender dreams of programming again after losing sight in hostilities
Pravda Ukraine
Bohdan Shyn, a Ukrainian defender from the city of Kamianske, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, completely lost his sight during the war. Before the full-scale war, he was a programmer, so he dreams of returning to his profession.
Source: The Nezlamni (Unbroken) National Rehabilitation Centre
42-year-old Bohdan has a beloved wife and two sons. As soon as Russia began its onslaught on Ukraine, the man decided to defend his country.
He voluntarily joined the Defence Forces and joined the ranks of the National Guard of Ukraine in March 2022. Almost a year after joining the army, Bohdan experienced what he was most afraid of when he went to war – in the battles on the Luhansk front, he irreversibly lost his sight.
Quote: “We got into positions. The enemy immediately started storming us. Everything was flying at us, and then one of the mines flew towards me. I only remember an explosion, a bright flash in my eyes, and that’s all, then I lost consciousness,” the defender says.
Bohdan regained consciousness only a few weeks after the injury – already in a hospital in Kyiv. This is how he describes his feelings at the time:
“I opened my eyes – it’s dark. At first, I thought it was just swelling or a bandage.”
Then the man realised that he had lost his left eye, and his right eye, although physically still there, would never be able to see again.
“Losing my eyesight for me is the horror of my whole life. I took it very hard and still can’t say I’ve come to terms with it,” the defender admits.
Thanks to the support of his wife, sons, friends and colleagues, Bohdan was able to find the strength and motivation to live on.
Volunteers in Kyiv picked up a cane for the blind veteran and taught him to move with its help.
Despite the loss of sight, Bohdan dreams of working as a programmer again.
Bohdan was sent to Lviv to the Nezlamni (Unbroken) National Rehabilitation Centre for the rehabilitation of servicemen who lost their sight on the battlefield. In a short period, specialists helped Bohdan better adapt to life at home and outside the hospital.
Here, for the first time after his injury, he sat down at a laptop and learned to use it – already with the help of special voice programs for the blind.
The defender believes that he will be able to overcome his injury and will program again.
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