The service is traditionally held just before midnight, with a procession around the church, but it was mid-afternoon this year because of the curfew."Do you believe them?" Fr Viktor wanted to know, when I asked about the significance of a Russian ceasefire.St John's church itself was damaged at the start of the full-scale war and its windows on one side are still boarded up."Maybe there will be a pause," one parishioner called
Larisa suggested. "But then
Russia will only launch even more intense attacks. We've seen that before."Baskets full of iced Easter cakes, painted eggs and sausageAt a military training ground about 12 miles (19km) from the Russian border, members of
Yasni Ochi strike UAV unit, part of
Khartia corps, are spending the weekend testing new kit for the frontline.They load new kamikaze drones with explosive, then practise diving at targets.Their commander,
Heorhiy, has ordered his troops to sit tight during the 32-hour ceasefire unless they're attacked. But he is sure that will happen.He has been buoyed up by the fact that war in the
Middle East has seen countries turn to
Ukraine for drone technology and expertise, both of which it can offer in abundance.But the peace process, launched by the US, has since stalled, with President
Donald Trump's envoys diverted to their own war with
Iran.
Ukraine is still pushing for strong security guarantees, too, from its allies: specifically, what the US would do if
Russia were to invade again in the future."It's not our choice. I don't like war, my guys don't like it. We used to have good civilian life,"
Heorhiy says - and I'm reminded that several of his unit were DJs before the war, part of an underground electronic music scene in
Dnipro."Now we do what we need to do."Many buildings are heavily damaged in
Kharkiv region after Russian attacksHeading back into
Kharkiv, we take the ring road that's now being covered in netting. It's designed to trap and entangle Russian drones and stop them hitting the vehicles beneath.But there's little to prevent missiles slamming into people's houses up here.
Russia is so close, there is barely time for air defences to react.In one suburb, several five-storey blocks of flats have been smashed to pieces. Others all around are boarded up and uninhabitable.Last month, 11 people were killed when a missile hit in the early hours and wiped out an entire section of their building. Among the ruins, there's still one red rug pinned firmly to a living-room wall. On the ground nearby are photographs of two of the dead.A memorial for missile strike victims in KharkivTheir neighbour, Olha, describes how she sheltered in a corridor that night with her elderly mother.She showed me video on her phone: the building opposite consumed by orange flames and her own flat in pieces.No wonder Olha is desperate for any let-up in the fighting,"This truce is only 1.5 days. But at least we can rest a bit, because here, you expect to die every second," she says. "We really want peace. Not for 1.5 days. For good."In quiet, angry tears she tells me the last sliver of the Donetsk region still in Ukrainian hands is not worth the lives of so many people.