When Vitalii’s skull was shattered near Avdiivka in August 2022 during military operations defending Ukraine, doctors gave no guarantees that he would survive and could not even predict how far his recovery path would go.
Today, Vitalii Shumey is speaking in full sentences, cracking jokes with his nurses, recovering memories, and preparing to walk again. Just a year ago he was not able to eat and respond to his surroundings at all.
For nearly three years, his father Serhii Fedorovych has refused to leave his son’s bedside, believing in his recovery and supporting his progress like no one else. His unwavering smile has become a beacon of hope at the rehabilitation center Modrychi in Lviv Oblast, where the workers called him a hero for his determination and fatherly love.
“This is my child,” Serhii said to Suspilne News. “While my hands and legs work, I won’t leave him. Never. Because this is my child. He defended our country so we could live peacefully. This is my duty.”
The father plays harmonica for his son, jokes with him, reads him, and maintains the constant conversation that helped bring Vitalii back from the brink of nothingness.
“Hope, hope. Cling to every goal, to every straw. Cling and hope that everything will be fine. Don’t give up. Because if we, parents, give up, it will be bad for our children,” Serhii believes.
We translated and summarized these reports to show you the story of father’s devotion, the power of unwavering faith, and the beautiful truth that love, patience, and hope can indeed work miracles.
Defender of Ukraine
Vitalii Shumey, standing over two meters tall, began his military service in 2014, when Russia covertly supported separatists in eastern Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts and illegally annexed Crimea.

As commander of a long-range anti-aircraft missile complex, he defended Ukraine across multiple fronts – from Kyiv and Chernihiv in the early days of the full-scale invasion to the brutal fighting in Donbas, earning three concussions before his final, nearly fatal encounter with war.
“Since 2014, he constantly was in ‘hot’ spots on Donbas,” his father explains with evident pride. “When the full-scale war began, he commanded a unit near Kyiv. He eliminated a lot of the enemy there. And he fought near Chernihiv. Then they transferred him to Donbas and he was there again – it was a nightmare there.”
“I’m proud of him. I never tried to talk him out of this,” he adds.
A deputy brigade commander once remarked, “If I had five such sergeants in the battalion, I wouldn’t need anything else.” Vitalii’s courage and leadership on the battlefield earned him such respect that in February 2025, a petition was created to award him the title of Hero of Ukraine.

Darkest hour: life-changing war injury
In August 2022, near Avdiivka of Donetsk Oblast, Vitalii’s life changed forever. A mine-blast caused severe trauma and a skull fractured on both sides. The prognosis was grim – doctors gave no chance for survival.
“The scariest was when he got injured, how his head was broken, how bad he felt,” Serhii recalls, his voice heavy with emotion. “When they transferred him to Chernihiv, he was hopeless. But I held on. I knew that everything should be good.”
Vitalii couldn’t move, speak, eat, or respond to his surroundings. He underwent three operations on his head in different hospitals across Ukraine – Dnipro, Kyiv, and Chernihiv. Doctors removed sections of his skull to allow his injured brain room to heal, placing him on tube feeding while his father watched, waiting for any sign of awareness.

“He didn’t even blink his eyes, he looked down and that’s it,” recalls volunteer Iryna Tymofieieva in 2023, who witnessed those darkest days. “In Kyiv, he was on tube feeding, and then our doctors stabilized him.”
For almost two years, Vitalii remained paralyzed and bedridden, his powerful frame reduced to stillness, his voice silenced. In those long months, his father was absent from his son’s side for only two days – when he himself was hospitalized with respiratory illness.


Father’s love works miracles
Five months after the injury, while in Chernihiv, came the first miraculous sign. Serhii had developed a routine of reading letters from well-wishers and books about local history to his seemingly unresponsive son, talking to him constantly, believing somehow that love could reach through the darkness.
“I realized that he hears, that he understands that they are reading to him,” Iryna remembers the breakthrough moment. “At some point he was touched and tears came from Vitalik. From that moment, he began to blink his eyes, then his eyes began to look left and right.”
These tears became the foundation of a new language between father and son. Serhii learned to read every minimal movement, every expression.
“By his eyes I can see when he wants water. When he needs to be changed, he starts making some movements – that’s enough. I already hear what needs to be done.”
Without medical training, the father learned to provide round-the-clock care, performing procedures himself and supporting medical professionals.
He feeds Vitalii, massages his limbs, reads to him, plays harmonica, and maintains constant conversation. All while also worrying about his older son Roman, who continues to serve in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
“My older son also serves in the Ukrainian military, defending Ukraine. Sometimes he doesn’t call for two or three days, though usually he calls constantly: ‘Dad, Dad, everything is fine with me.’ But I can hear from his voice whether it’s fine or not,” he shares.
Sometimes Roman manages to find time off his military duty and visits the rehabilitation center to see his brother.
Serhii beams as he watches his two sons finally talk again – something they had waited for so desperately long. Vitalii peppers Roman with questions about family, asks eagerly about his nephew, remembers old friends, and his humor flows naturally. These conversations that once seemed impossible now fill the room with warmth and hope.

A remarkable breakthrough: first words after serious injury
In March 2023, Vitalii and his father traveled to Barcelona, Spain, for specialized treatment. The Ukrainian football club Shakhtar stepped in to cover expenses for the operation and rehabilitation. There, surgeons installed plates to protect Vitalii’s brain and removed remaining blood clots.
For seven months, father and son lived together in a foreign country, Serhii learning medical procedures, providing round-the-clock care, and never losing faith.
The defining moment of their time in Spain came unexpectedly. Serhii bent down to his son’s face and asked, “Do you know who I am?”
After a pause, Vitalii responded: “Papa.” [father]
“I got goosebumps,” Serhii remembers. “Then I asked – what should I give you: water or juice? He said – juice. I quickly poured it for him.”
These first words gave way to more communication, but progress faced a serious setback when Vitalii suffered an epileptic seizure in late summer 2023. His condition regressed to what it had been immediately after surgery, devastating his father but not diminishing his determination.
“I will never get on my knees. Never. Not in front of the Russians who came to us,” says Serhii. “I can only kneel in church and in the garden near the flower beds. I will crawl, but I will get him on his feet. This is my dream!”

Progress that inspires and gives hope
In November 2023, father and son returned to Ukraine, continuing rehabilitation at the specialized Modrychi center in western Lviv Oblast. There, Vitalii began an intensive program – more than five hours daily of various therapies with physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech specialists.
“At this stage, we spend a lot of time in a vertical position,” explains his physical therapist Mykola Nadych. “We stretch Vitalii, keep his joints in tone, and provoke him to do something: say something, show something.”
Serhii remained constantly at his side, living at the center, hanging photos of Vitalii before his injury and military chevrons from Spanish soldiers above the bed as reminders of how far they had come.
By early 2025, Vitalii’s progress accelerated dramatically. He began speaking not just in short phrases but in complete sentences. His cognitive abilities improved significantly – he could identify his location in Lviv Oblast and remembered his home address. He began commenting on television programs and politics. His memory includes much of his pre-injury life, with gaps only around the time of injury and his coma in Kyiv and Chernihiv.
“He started talking and controlling his head more, showing various emotions, such as, laughter, crying, and sadness. It’s the achievement of the occupational therapist and the speech therapist, we work as a team. The father also communicates a lot, tells stories – this makes a significant contribution to the result,” says physical therapist Mykola Nadych.

His physical progress is equally remarkable. Vitalii strengthened his shoulder girdle muscles and cervical spine, learning to hold his head independently. He tenses and makes movements with his arms and legs, learns to hold a spoon and eat independently.
One of the most emotionally significant moments came when Vitalii’s recovering memory led him to ask about his absent mother.
“About two weeks ago we were having lunch and he said to me: ‘Dad, can I ask a question?'” Serhii recounts. “I said: ‘Yes.’ And he asked: ‘Tell me, has Mom probably died, since Mom doesn’t call, doesn’t visit, I haven’t heard Mom’s voice for a long time.'”
Having hidden this painful truth throughout his son’s recovery, Serhii finally confirmed that Vitalii’s mother had indeed passed away. Though the news brought tears, Serhii comforts his son by telling him, “Mom is in heaven, Mom sees us, prays for us, and wants everything to be good for us.” He then turns to journalists saying “Mom is not here so I must be with him.”

Sadly, it’s been discovered that Vitalii has practically gone blind – his vision will be studied further to understand if there’s a chance for recovery. Ahead also lies leg surgery to remove contractures from his feet, which will help him sit better in a wheelchair, verticalize, and eventually try to take steps and learn to walk again.
But his transformation from an unresponsive patient given no chance of survival to an engaged, communicative person with improving physical abilities represents an extraordinary testament to medical care, rehabilitation, and above all, unwavering familial support.
This story of recovery inspired others at the rehabilitation center and outside its borders. Recently, American and French filmmakers visited Modrychi to document Vitalii’s journey for a film about Ukrainians who refused to surrender.
For Serhii, whose life has been entirely dedicated to his son’s recovery for nearly three years, the ultimate goal remains clear:
“I think a little more and we will get up. I assure you, we will achieve our goal. And we will go home healthy.”
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