The Quiet Patriot: A Story of Ordinary Heroism in Extraordinary Times
A Reluctant Leader Who Never Needed Applause
I haven’t yet interviewed Volodymyr Mykolaienko, but I will. For now, I only know him the way many of us know Ukraine’s quiet heroes: through the voices of those who love him, those who lived beside him, and those who describe his kind of courage with reverence. My Ukrainian family talks of such men without exaggeration, because their truth doesn’t need it

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Volodymyr Mykolaienko never set out to be a hero. He was the mayor of Kherson for years, but he wasn’t chasing power or fame—he was the sort of leader who showed up, did the work, and went home. When the Russians came, he made a choice that may have seemed simple to him, though it carried unimaginable consequences: he would never betray his community, even if it meant rotting in a basement.
That wasn’t bravado. That was just Mykolaienko. Quiet, steady, uncompromising when it mattered.
Part of a Larger Pattern
Mykolaienko's ordeal was not an isolated incident. According to a June 2025 analytical report by the Human Rights Centre ZMINA titled "Become mayor or we will break your legs," his experience represents one of 133 documented cases of persecution against local officials across Kherson, Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia, Chernihiv, and Kyiv regions since February 24, 2022. Based on in-depth interviews, surveys by partner NGOs, and open sources, the study documented unlawful detentions, enforced disappearances, torture, cruel treatment, and killings—with nearly half the cases occurring in Kherson region (65) and Zaporizhzhia region (33).
The victims—111 men and 22 women, with violence reported in 47 cases—represented legitimate Ukrainian authority that became a key obstacle to Russia's occupation goals. As ZMINA's analysis revealed, Russia's objective was not temporary control but full incorporation of occupied territories into the Russian Federation through fake referendums and federal constitutional laws. Local authorities like Mykolaienko stood in the way of this systematic annexation strategy.
The bitter irony, as the ZMINA report documented, was that many persecuted Ukrainian leaders had remained in their towns and cities not for politics, but out of duty to keep their communities alive in the face of humanitarian collapse. They struggled to maintain electricity and water, organize food and medicine supplies, and shield residents from looting and chaos when evacuations were blocked and hospitals disrupted. By staying, they became visible figures of resilience—and therefore targets. Russian occupation forces responded with a brutal toolkit: blackmail, coercion, threats, unlawful detention, torture, enforced disappearances, and outright killings.
Few stories illustrate this tragedy more starkly than that of Ihor Viktorovych Kolyhaiev, the elected mayor of Kherson. When Russian troops seized the city, Kolyhaiev refused to collaborate but insisted on remaining at his post to keep basic services running and prevent total breakdown. For this quiet defiance, he was abducted in June 2022 and held incommunicado, his fate unknown for years. In captivity, he was subjected to torture and ultimately killed—another patriot erased by Russia’s system of terror against civilian leaders. His death stands as both a personal tragedy and a symbol of the occupiers’ deliberate attempt to decapitate Ukrainian local governance.
Russia’s occupation strategy often begins with the removal of legitimate local leaders and their replacement by collaborators who act as saboteurs. In Hola Prystan, Kherson Oblast, Mayor Oleksandr Babych was abducted in March 2022 after repeated threats from rival politician Oleksii Kovalov. With Russian backing, Kovalov quickly positioned himself as the town’s de facto authority, presenting himself as a humanitarian figure while quietly cooperating with occupation forces. His collaboration helped the Russians secure influence over the community, showing how personal ambition and betrayal could become tools of Moscow’s control.
The case illustrates a wider Russian method: eliminate or detain elected leaders, then empower opportunistic insiders willing to legitimize occupation. Kovalov’s eventual public declaration that “Russia is here forever” and his role in integrating local agriculture into Russia’s economy reveal how collaborators are used to normalize annexation and undermine trust in Ukrainian institutions. Meanwhile, Babych remains disappeared, a reminder of the human cost when authority is violently stripped away and replaced with loyal proxies.
Yet even with violence and intimidation, they struggled with a shortage of willing collaborators, leading to unstable, rotating administrations that never matched the legitimacy or competence of the men and women they had forcibly removed.
A Lifetime of Quiet Service
Long before the world knew his name, Volodymyr Mykolaienko was already choosing Ukraine. In 2014, as revolution swept through Kyiv's Maidan, he wasn't giving speeches or leading rallies in Kherson. He was simply there—one citizen among hundreds in his city's local Euromaidan protests, standing with his neighbors against the corruption and Russian influence that threatened their future.
It was typical of the man: no fanfare, no grand gestures, just showing up when it mattered.
When extraordinary elections were called in May 2014, amid the chaos of revolution and Russian aggression in Crimea, Mykolaienko ran for mayor. His platform was refreshingly straightforward: Ukrainian sovereignty, local stability, and keeping separatist influences out of Kherson. Voters responded, giving him a decisive victory not because he promised to be extraordinary, but because he promised to be dependable.
His approach to the threats facing Kherson was characteristically direct. In 2015, as Russian-backed separatism threatened to spread south from Donbas, he issued a blunt warning: "We will not meet with bread and salt either local separatists or visiting actors of the separate genre. If necessary, we will shoot to kill." These weren't the words of a politician calculating angles—they were the words of a man stating simple facts about defending his home.
When re-election time came in 2015, Kherson voters doubled down on their trust in him. He won the runoff with nearly 68% of the vote, a landslide that reflected not personal ambition fulfilled, but community confidence in steady leadership during uncertain times.
The Quiet Revolutionary
Mykolaienko's mayoral tenure from 2014 to 2020 revealed the kind of leader he was: steady, principled, focused on the work rather than the spotlight. He supported anti-corruption activists like Kateryna Handziuk, who served as his advisor and became a symbol of Ukraine's reform movement before her tragic death following a 2018 acid attack. His support for Handziuk wasn't calculated politics—it was friendship and principle aligned.
When his term ended in 2020, Mykolaienko could have faded into comfortable retirement. Instead, he remained engaged in his community, the same quiet presence he'd always been. He wasn't seeking another moment in the spotlight; he was simply being himself—a man who cared about his neighbors and his country.
Then February 24, 2022 arrived, and everything changed—not just for him, but for local leaders across occupied Ukraine.
The Day That Revealed Everything
On that first day of the invasion, as Russian missiles struck across Ukraine, Mykolaienko joined hundreds of Kherson residents in a spontaneous rally outside the city's military enlistment office. The crowd, fueled by shock and determination, demanded weapons to form a defense against the approaching Russian columns. Leveraging his status as a former mayor and public figure, he was among the vocal leaders urging authorities to arm civilians quickly. Reports describe the scene as chaotic yet resolute: residents, including retirees like him, chanted for rifles and ammunition, fearing Kherson's vulnerability near Crimea. Later, he would say this was the moment he committed himself fully to territorial defense.
In the days that followed, as Russian troops advanced from Crimea, he formally enlisted in Kherson's 124th Separate Territorial Defense Brigade. Without heavy weaponry, the volunteers focused on reconnaissance, barricades, and delaying tactics. Fellow defenders recall him coordinating with locals to scout enemy positions and distribute supplies, drawing on his mayoral network for logistics. When Kherson fell on March 1, his unit was among the last to withdraw. “We were the last to leave,” he later said, bitter at the betrayal he perceived in the city’s rapid collapse.
With Kherson occupied on March 2—the first regional capital to fall—Mykolaienko chose to remain rather than evacuate. He went underground, avoiding Russian patrols while actively supporting pro-Ukrainian networks. His niece, Hanna Korshun-Samchuk, later described him as a quiet organizer who provided safe houses, relayed intelligence across the lines, and helped families of missing fighters. Though not publicly visible to avoid capture, he supported defiant acts like the March 13 rally, when thousands chanted “Russia is an occupier” under the eyes of Russian snipers.
By early April, collaborators including Kyrylo Stremousov approached him with offers to resume his mayoral role under Russian control. Promises of “stability” soon gave way to threats against his family. Mykolaienko refused without hesitation. To the media, he called collaboration “moral suicide.” To friends, he was even blunter: “I’d rather rot in a basement than betray Ukraine.”
The rapid Russian advance meant he never fought in open battle, but his choice revealed everything about who he was. This wasn’t a former mayor trying to reclaim relevance—this was a Ukrainian who understood that when your country is attacked, you don’t ask what you’ll get out of defending it. You just defend it.
When Kherson fell, many fled. Mykolaienko stayed. When underground pro-Ukrainian rallies formed, he supported them. When Russian proxies came calling with collaboration offers, he refused. Not dramatically, not with grand speeches, but with the same quiet certainty that had defined his entire life.
The Choice That Defined Everything
By April 2022, the Russians had grown frustrated with his persistent refusal to legitimize their occupation. They escalated from offers to demands to threats—following what ZMINA documented as Russia's systematic tactics of blackmail, coercion, unlawful detention, torture, and cruel treatment. On April 17, they gave him a final ultimatum: serve as their puppet mayor or face the consequences. His response, delivered to his niece before they came for him, was perfectly in character: he preferred imprisonment in a basement to working with Russia.
The next day, Russian forces came to his home. As they led him away, Mykolaienko wasn't making a heroic gesture for the cameras. He was simply being himself—a man whose loyalty to Ukraine was so fundamental that betraying it was literally unthinkable. His case would become one of the 133 documented by ZMINA—part of what the report characterized as systematic persecution designed to destroy the Ukrainian system of local self-government and replace it with Russian structures as part of broader assimilation and annexation strategy.
Three Years of Quiet Resistance
What followed was a systematic attempt to break not just Mykolaienko's body, but his spirit. Three beatings a day during interrogations. Mock executions. Dog attacks. Psychological warfare designed to shatter his sense of self and replace it with compliance—methods that mirrored the conditions of detention documented by ZMINA across multiple cases. Several local officials documented by ZMINA were killed as a direct result of Russian violence; his survival was never guaranteed.
They filmed propaganda videos, trying to force him to denounce Ukrainian heroes as Nazis. He refused to fully comply, accepting more torture rather than give them what they wanted. They moved him from Kherson to occupied Crimea, then to prisons in Russia, always with the same demand: replace their puppet governor Volodymyr Saldo and legitimize their occupation.
"Russians are very skillful at using pain against you," he would later say, with the same matter-of-fact tone he might use to describe the weather. "They can turn everything into pain. But there's no pain that can turn a lie into truth."
For over three years, he endured broken ribs without medical care, isolation without information, and daily brutality without surrender. This wasn't cinematic heroism—it was the quiet persistence of a man who simply knew who he was and refused to become something else, embodying the resistance that made local Ukrainian officials such targets for Russian persecution.
The Ultimate Act of Friendship
Perhaps the most revealing moment of Mykolaienko's captivity came in late 2022, when he was offered release in a prisoner exchange. After months of torture, freedom was within reach. Instead, he gave his spot to a cellmate suffering from gangrene, fearing the man wouldn't survive much longer.
It was a choice that perfectly captured who he was—not someone seeking personal glory, but a friend who looked out for others. The Russians retaliated by removing him from future exchange lists, condemning him to years more of captivity. His act of friendship had sentenced him to extended suffering, and he accepted it without complaint.
Independence Day Freedom
On August 24, 2025—Ukraine's Independence Day—Volodymyr Mykolaienko finally walked free as part of a prisoner exchange mediated by the UAE. His first words to his wife were "Slava Ukraini"—Glory to Ukraine. Simple words from a man who had never stopped meaning them.
The physical transformation was stark. Where once stood a robust 62-year-old, there was now a frail, white-haired 65-year-old survivor. But his spirit remained exactly what it had always been—quiet, steady, unbroken.
He called his release his "second birthday" and immediately began advocating for other prisoners still in Russian captivity, including current Kherson Mayor Ihor Kolykhaiev. Even in freedom, his first thoughts were for others still suffering—others among the 133 cases documented by ZMINA across five regions, many of whom remain in captivity as victims of what the report concluded was a systematic occupation tool.
A Crime Against Communities
Mykolaienko's story illuminates what the ZMINA report concluded: persecution of local government officials represents a systematic occupation tool, with crimes against local authorities forming part of Russia's broader strategy of assimilation and annexation. These aren't just crimes against individual officials, but crimes against communities and against the very idea of local autonomy. Russia sought to destroy the Ukrainian system of local self-government, replacing it with its own structures to facilitate the permanent incorporation of occupied territories into the Russian Federation.
His resistance represented everything Moscow sought to destroy: authentic local leadership rooted in community service rather than imposed authority. When he chose captivity over collaboration, he was defending not just his personal integrity, but the principle that communities have the right to choose their own leaders.
The Leader Ukraine Needs
In our age of performative politics and social media heroics, Mykolaienko represents something increasingly rare: authentic leadership rooted in service rather than self-promotion. He never sought to be special—he was reluctant about recognition, uncomfortable with praise, focused always on the work rather than the glory.
But he was never reluctant to be a patriot, never reluctant to be a friend, never reluctant to show up when his community needed him. That's what made him a great leader long before the world knew his name, and what made him such a threat to Russian occupation that they felt compelled to break him.
His resistance wasn't about grand gestures or historical moments. It was about the daily choice to remain true to his values, even when those values demanded tremendous sacrifice. It was about friendship—refusing to abandon a dying cellmate, supporting activists like Handziuk, standing with neighbors who needed weapons to defend their city.
Why Quiet Heroes Matter
Mykolaienko's story matters because it reminds us that true patriotism isn't about flags and speeches—it's about the quiet choices we make when no one is watching, and the steadfast loyalty we maintain even when staying loyal costs everything. His experience represents the broader assault on local democracy that ZMINA documented, but also the resilience that has kept Ukraine's spirit of self-governance alive.
His three years in Russian captivity weren't a deviation from who he was; they were the fullest expression of it. A man who had spent decades serving his community simply continued serving it, even when service meant enduring unspeakable suffering.
"Russia fights against the truth," he said after his release, with characteristic understatement. His refusal to participate in that fight—his insistence on remaining true to himself and his country—represents something precious in our world: the power of authentic integrity against systematic oppression.
The Continuing Choice
Today, as the war in Ukraine continues, Volodymyr Mykolaienko continues making the same choice he's made his entire adult life: to serve his country and his people, without seeking special recognition for doing what he sees as simply right. His advocacy for other imprisoned officials continues the same pattern of service that defined his entire career.
When we stand with Ukraine, we stand with leaders like Mykolaienko—not because they're perfect or extraordinary, but because they're authentic. Because they show up. Because when the moment comes to choose between comfort and principle, they choose principle so naturally it seems effortless.
The ZMINA report's documentation of 133 cases across Kherson, Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia, Chernihiv, and Kyiv regions reveals that Mykolaienko was not alone—he was part of a community of local leaders who made similar choices, who faced similar consequences, and who collectively represent Ukraine's democratic strength. The systematic persecution of mayors, village heads, deputies, utility directors, school principals, and community leaders shows Russia's recognition of—and fear of—that democratic strength. The occupiers' struggle to find qualified collaborators and high turnover in occupation administrations demonstrates the effectiveness of this resistance.
A Model for Democracy Under Fire
In a world that often rewards the loudest voices and the boldest claims, Mykolaienko reminds us that sometimes the most powerful resistance comes from quiet people who simply refuse to become something they're not. His basement wasn't a place of defeat—it was where he proved that some things about ourselves cannot be taken away, no matter how skillfully others apply pain.
The quiet patriot endured. Ukraine endures. And in that endurance, there is both hope and a model for the kind of leadership our world desperately needs—authentic, selfless, and unbreakably true. His story, now understood within the broader context of Russia's war against local democracy, shows us that the fight for freedom is often won not on battlefields, but in the daily choices of ordinary people who refuse to surrender their principles.
As the ZMINA report emphasizes, supporting victims like Mykolaienko and recognizing these systematic crimes isn't just about justice—it's about preserving the democratic foundations that make communities like Kherson worth defending. The documented persecution of 111 men and 22 women across five Ukrainian regions, involving unlawful detentions, enforced disappearances, torture, cruel treatment, and killings, represents Russia's comprehensive assault on Ukrainian local self-government. Russia's war is being fought in villages and councils as much as in trenches, and in both arenas, leaders like Volodymyr Mykolaienko prove that democratic principles cannot be conquered through systematic persecution.

