A 10-year-old girl’s piano was found with a Russian grenade hidden in it.Photo: flipping twitter
It has been nearly three months since Russia invaded Ukraine, and the brutal acts of the Russian army have been exposed one following another. A mother and daughter living in Bucza, a suburb of Kyiv, were forced to flee their home shortly following the war began. They only returned home recently. In addition to finding that their home was ransacked, their 10-year-old daughter’s piano was also found hidden inside. A grenade, suspected that the Russian army was trying to trap and kill her daughter who went home to play the piano, made the Ukrainian mother sigh: “I don’t know how many talented Ukrainian children will face the danger of this war.”
Ukrainian women Tatiana Monko were forced to leave their home in Butcha following the Russian invasion, and only returned home last week with their 10-year-old daughter Daryna, according to the Daily Mail. . As soon as she came home to check, the valuables in the home were looted, and the autographed poster of Darina’s favorite band was also torn apart, but the most thing she wanted to do when she got home was to play the piano. But Mom noticed that the trophy on the piano had been moved, and immediately stopped Darina, who was regarding to play the piano.
Manco opened the lid and found a VOG-25P grenade attached to the hammer of the piano. She shouted angrily: “I want the world to know what these bastards have done!” Manco also revealed that Darina began to learn to sing and play chess at the age of 6. Last year, she won the fourth place in the regional chess championship. She is still in the theatre studio, has guest roles in TV dramas, and has been studying piano and accordion for the last two years, but her happy life has been “ruined by the Russians”.
Ukrainian bomb disposal experts then removed the grenade. Anton Gerashchenko, adviser to the Ukrainian interior minister, said that miraculously, the grenade hidden in her piano did not detonate. Thanks to her mother’s vigilance, no one was injured. Russian President Vladimir Putin blamed the international community for isolating Russia’s culture and characters, but what Russia has done to preserve the image of a civilized country is “actually like dynamite in a piano”.