Mary’s Miracles during the Ukraine War
Testimony from Bishop Ryabukha
(ANS – Rome – March 24, 2023) – The terrible reality of the war in Ukraine, with violence, bombings, and thousands of people fleeing; also the hidden and silent miracles that took place for so many simple people, the constant presence of Mary Help of Christians, and the zeal of a shepherd for his suffering flock—all this was concentrated in the customary Good Night thought offered a few days ago by Bishop Maksym Ryabukha, SDB, auxiliary bishop of the Donetsk Exarchate, to the Salesians at Salesian Headquarters in Rome.
“I want to leave a
simple testimony: until last December 21, I was the director of the Salesian
house in Kiev. We lived through the whole siege of the capital. For me it was
like reliving the story of Don Bosco,” the prelate began in fluent Italian, as
he arrived in Italy when he was 17, having finished Ukrainian post-Soviet
schooling at the time.
The house in Kiev,
which the Salesians did not build but received as it was, had a unique youth
center at the local church level, but it was without a basement. “When the war
started we asked the question: where to hide from missiles and bombs?” he
continues.
The grounds of the
Salesian house adjoin a state school, which, although linked to the Orthodox
Patriarchate in Moscow, has always maintained a good neighborly relationship
with the Salesians. In the first weeks of the war, it housed 320 people in its
basement. “The director often called me asking that I go and talk to people
because there is a generalized depression.”
Bp. Ryabukha
recounts how during his visits he tried in every way to encourage and support
those in need. Like the time he met an elderly lady with a blank look and asked
her whether he could hug her, and upon receiving her consent, he felt her “melt”
and return to reality in his hands. Or telling them, “I don’t know whether you
believe or not, but the house you see from your windows is not mine, it is our
Lady’s; therefore, nothing will happen in my house. For Don Bosco has promised
that every person who crosses the threshold of any Salesian house is under the
care of Mary Help of Christians.’ But since if something happens to you here,
it ends up falling on my house as well, you can rest assured that our Lady
keeps all of you under her custody as well.”
Of course, these
were words of consolation and support to frightened people. But Bp. Ryabukha
would also like to emphasize another fact: “From the beginning of the
full-scale war until today, there is no one among the people who have passed
through our house who has died in the war. This for me is a great miracle.”
The Salesian house
in Dnipro is now a center that receives refugees and displaced people from
various parts of the country. There is currently only one Salesian left there. He
has been involved for months in accompanying these people as they flee the war.
“The stories he reports are often terrifying, but so far he has managed to save
the lives of many people, many boys. This, too, we believe is a blessing that
Don Bosco gives us.”
Concerning his
episcopal appointment as bishop of Donetsk, he says, “Perhaps the Holy Father
chose me because he knows that the Salesians are good with the most difficult
boys, and there is work there.”
And as for his
apostolate, he identifies two major areas for the “pastoral ministry of
paternity” which he intends to pursue: “The parish environment, because the presence
of the priest, as well as the bishop, serves to make God’s presence manifest
and visible. And then also the military: that today is another ‘parish’ that I
have in abundance. Many of those guys are our alumni or the fathers or uncles
of our students.”
One of these
military men – part of the defense contingent protecting the Ukrainian capital
who from the beginning of the war until mid-July came to the Salesian house in Kiev
to shower or change – contacted Bp. Ryabukha again from the front. “He wrote to
me, and as soon as he could he even phoned me, to thank me, and he told me, ‘I
know you are praying for us. I got caught in a bombing raid and shrapnel from a
bomb went through my nose. A few inches further and I would no longer be alive
today. It was a miracle of our Lady, which you were always telling us about.’”
Bp. Ryabukha’s last
words at the end were only of thanks: “I would like to say thank all of you, and
the Salesian Congregation, which from this heart in the center allows all of us
to stay in the field. We are with one another in this mission that Don Bosco
dreamed of and wanted to give us and that does not die.”
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