The night Odessa shook again
Another morning of terror in the Ukrainian port. Authorities confirm at least three deaths after an attack with Russian unmanned aircraft. Among the victims, two women and a child of just two years old.
Rescuers worked through rubble until dawn. The target was a residential building, destroyed by the direct impact. Volodymyr Zelenskyy gave the chilling figure: eleven hospitalized, including a pregnant woman and two small children.
“While rescue teams worked through the rubble to save survivors”
But Odessa was not the only one. While they were searching for survivors here, an elderly woman died in Kherson from similar bombings. The south of the country continues to be a testing ground for this war that no longer distinguishes between fronts and dormitory cities.
What hurts is the pattern. Always the same: night hours, civilian targets, victims who never wore a uniform. Each new attack seems designed to erode more than just infrastructure—to undermine the normality that tries to rebuild itself between alerts.
The images show what words cannot reach: windows turned into craters, toys between twisted beams, neighbors in pajamas helping neighbors. It is the war seen from the bedroom, from the kitchen, from the crib of a child who will not turn three years old.
Moscow is silent on this specific attack, as it usually does. kyiv documents every wound as Europe debates whether to send more anti-aircraft systems. Meanwhile, in Odessa today they mourn a child who only knew peace through the stories he was told.
![]()




