Oleksandr Budko, a 28-year-old Ukrainian struggle veteran, whose navy name signal is Teren, poses for a portrait in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. Budko, a double amputee, participated within the Ukrainian model of the TV present The Bachelor.
Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
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Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
KYIV, Ukraine — Oleksandr Budko seems to be like a number one man. He is sandy-haired and blue-eyed, with muscular tattooed arms and the chiseled face of a film star.
“I’m a military veteran, an activist and writer. And I’m also The Bachelor,” he says on this season’s Ukrainian version of the favored actuality TV franchise.
The Bachelor, or Kholostiak in Ukrainian, is produced by Starlight Media and Warner Bros. Worldwide Tv, and it airs on STB, a Ukrainian channel. This season, its thirteenth, premiered on Nov. 1.

Inna Bielien, 29, a German language translator, poses for a portrait at dwelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Dec. 13. She is among the feminine contestant of the Ukrainian model of the TV present The Bachelor.
Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
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Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
In a single episode, Budko is on a rock-climbing date with a healthful translator named Inna Bielien.
“Oh my God,” she says, as she hangs off the cliff.
“Don’t worry, I will be very close, right behind you,” he says, as he helps her scale the rock face.
What goes unsaid is that Budko is doing this on prosthetic legs, clearly seen as a result of he is carrying shorts. He is a double amputee. He represents the tens of 1000’s of Ukrainians who’ve misplaced limbs since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. An adviser to Ukraine’s Sports activities and Youth Ministry put the quantity at round 100,000 final 12 months.
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Oleksandr Budko, with the decision signal Teren, misplaced each legs on the entrance line in Ukraine’s battle in opposition to the Russian invasion.
Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
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Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
Their visibility — in trend magazines, on catwalks and now a preferred actuality TV collection — reveals how a lot the struggle has affected Ukraine.
“Still,” he tells NPR in an interview, “there is still a problem with stigma. I went on The Bachelor to help address it.”
“I realized then I would lose my legs”
Budko, 28, grew up in western Ukraine and was working as a barista in a coffeeshop in Kyiv when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. He enlisted and was quickly on the entrance line. That summer time, his unit had stalled whereas making an attempt to push Russian troops out of northeastern Ukraine. Throughout a lull within the combating, the unit determined to relaxation. Budko lay down in a trench.
“Then something hit that caused the trench to crumble,” he says.
Russian troops had shelled the ditch. Budko was buried in earth, twisting in ache as his fellow troopers dug him out.
“I was conscious the entire time,” he says. “And I also realized then that I would lose my legs.”
Budko recovered by intensive, and infrequently excruciating, bodily remedy. He threw himself into sports activities, even competing in swimming on the 2023 Invictus Video games. He additionally wrote a guide and carried out in a fashionable ballet.
“There was no point in me being angry at anyone or anything about what happened,” he mentioned. “It was better to do something good instead.”

Oleksandr Budko tries to trip a unicycle on the Restoration rehabilitation heart in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. He goes to rehabilitation facilities to share the data on the method of his restoration, logistics to acquire prosthetics and in regards to the potentialities for injured veterans.
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Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
Within the opening to The Bachelor, he jumps on a bike, tucks a pink rose into his leather-based vest-jacket, and speeds away. Every episode options stunning younger girls vying for his consideration, usually with the built-in melodrama typical of actuality reveals.
“I wanted to show the possibilities,” he says. “I wanted to give people faith.”
“You are examples of courage and heroism”
The folks he is speaking about are fellow wounded veterans. Budko visits them usually, and so they’re a troublesome crowd — exhausted, skeptical, emotionally distant.
“They never allow themselves to show any feelings of failure,” he says.
On a current afternoon, he stops by a hospital in Kyiv the place dozens of veterans are recovering from amputations. He cringes when he hears their screams of ache throughout bodily remedy.
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Injured troopers on the Restoration rehabilitation heart hearken to Oleksandr Budko, a 28-year-old veteran, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. Throughout his visits to rehabs, troopers ask Budko numerous sensible questions on issues like prosthetics and well being care.
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Budko walks right into a room full of wounded troopers in wheelchairs and sitting on beds. He introduces himself together with his navy name signal, Teren. It is the title of a thorny wild plum. In Ukrainian folklore, it symbolizes obstacles and overcoming them.
“Do not focus only on your injury, because remember — you are examples of courage and heroism,” he tells the troopers. “You are not disabled.”
Rostyslav Andrusenko, a health care provider serving to the boys get better, says many are depressed. They worry they may now not be helpful to their households or society.
“They ask me if they will ever walk again or play football with their friends or help their kids, all the everyday things that they did before,” Andrusenko says.
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Oleksandr Budko, whose navy name signal is Teren, talks to injured troopers on the Restoration rehabilitation heart in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18.
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Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
Budko provides a pep speak to the troopers and likewise cracks just a few jokes that do not fairly land. The lads politely clap when he finishes after which ask a variety of sensible questions, like the place to get the very best prosthetics.
Mykola Kovalenko, a married father of two, badly injured his leg on the entrance line after a mine exploded and will must have it amputated. He asks Budko learn how to navigate medical paperwork, which he equates to “passing through the seven circles of hell.”
Budko guarantees to assist, and Kovalenko lastly cracks a smile. He says his spouse and two teenage daughters love this season of The Bachelor.
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Ukrainian struggle veteran Oleksandr Budko (proper) talks to an injured soldier, Mykola Kovalenko, 36, on the Restoration rehabilitation heart in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18.
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Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
“What he is doing is very helpful,” Kovalenko says. “He is showing guys like me, guys who are injured, that all is not lost, that we shouldn’t give up, that we should keep trying.”
Budko says troopers not often talk about their emotions about relationships and self-image with him. He does provide his quantity, although, in case they do wish to speak sooner or later.
“Everyone has their own sensitive topics that they’re ashamed to talk about,” he says, together with intimacy and the worry of being pitied by potential companions.
Love and struggle
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Inna Bielien, 29, German language translator who’s a contestant on the Ukrainian model of the TV present The Bachelor, reveals a photograph from behind the scenes of present, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Dec. 13.
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Oksana Parafeniuk/for NPR
The struggle has additionally touched the ladies on the present. One is a widow whose husband was killed on the entrance line. One other is a soldier. Inna Bielien, the translator on the rock-climbing date, can also be a humanitarian volunteer who sources and sends provides to Ukraine’s troops.
NPR meets her in her fashionable house in a Kyiv neighborhood that is usually hit by Russian drones. She talks a couple of soldier, Vadym, she beloved who was killed early within the struggle. She says she was nonetheless holding out hope when she obtained the decision about him.
“I remember thinking, Lord, I hope he’s alive, even with no arms and no legs, because it is better to come back without limbs than not come back at all,” she says.
Even so, she says, many Ukrainians wrestle to speak to wounded veterans.
“I was told that if you see a soldier, you say thank you and put your hand to your heart,” Bielien says. “Asking about amputations, whether that crosses personal boundaries, that is still new for us.”
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Oleksandr Budko talks to a participant on the Donbas Media Discussion board convention in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. Budko, a Ukrainian veteran who misplaced each legs on the entrance line, stars within the Ukrainian model of the TV present The Bachelor.
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Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR
Budko says the collection helped present that it is OK to ask questions, particularly in terms of intimacy.
“Like, ‘Does it hurt when I touch your limbs there?’ and so on,” he says.
Budko says he feels he has completed some good on the present. And he now has a girlfriend, however will not say if it is Bielien, who says she fell in love with him, or another person.
He cannot reveal something, he says, till the season finale on Friday.