During the funeral of Irina Tsybukh at the Lychakiv cemetery, a bonfire was lit and songs from the list that the paramedic left were sung.
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“Public” reports this and publishes a video.
On Monday, June 3, a funeral and farewell ceremony took place in Lviv for Hospitaller paramedic Irina Tsybukh, call sign “Chek”.
The farewell ceremony in Lviv took place in the Garrison Church. Friends, colleagues, brothers-in-arms and city residents came to see Irina off on her final journey.
Before the full-scale invasion, the girl was a public reform manager and also implemented educational projects in remote villages of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.
In February 2022, she joined the volunteer battalion and took up the position of crew chief.
Irina Tsybukh “Chek” died during a rotation in the Kharkov direction on May 29, a few days before her birthday. She would have turned 26 on June 1st.
After the funeral in the Garrison Church, a citywide farewell ceremony took place on Rynok Square in Lviv.
Then people went to say goodbye to the Lychakiv cemetery. Irina was buried in the field of honorary burials. A farewell bonfire was also lit there.
Mom, don’t cry, You gave birth to me for freedom And at the cost of your own blood Sunflowers will sprout in the field, singer Marina Krut, a friend of paramedic Irina Tsybukh, performed the last song for the girl in the Garrison Church of Lviv.
The artist released the song “Volya” 2 years ago, at the beginning of the full-scale Russian invasion.
Source: Racurs

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.