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Why a Ukrainian mother wrote on her toddler's body as they fled the war

When Sasha Makoviymade the decision to flee the bombing in Kyiv three weeks ago with her two-year-old daughter, Vira, she realized that their safety was neitherguaranteednor would be immediate.

The names of 2-year-old Vira Makoviy's family were written in ink on her back

Vira Makoviy's back is seen, marked with her name and the names of her extended family. Her mother, Sasha, decided to write the information on her daughter's body in case they were separated or she was killed and her child left alone. (Submitted By Sasha Makoviy)

When Sasha Makoviymade the decision to flee the bombing in Kyiv three weeks ago with her two-year-old daughter, Vira, she realized that their safety was neitherguaranteednor would be immediate.

So she put a small piece of paper in her daughter's pocket with her name and the names of her extended family on it, explaining how they could be contacted if mother and daughter got separated. But she worried that if Vira was wounded along the way, and if she herself were killed, the paper might go missing.

That's whenMakoviymade what she called a "painful" decision to mark her daughter's body with her family's contact information.

"It's hard to understand that in [the] 21st century you have to dothat kind of work,just to be prepared to be dead or to be separated [from] your lovely baby."

WATCH | A mother's 'painful' decision:

Mother who fled Ukraine with baby was 'prepared to be dead'

2 years ago
Duration 1:13
Sasha Makoviy made the "painful" decision to write her contact info on her baby's body as they fled Kyiv in case they became separated or Makoviy was killed.

Makoviy and her toddler did make it out of the embattled country, a long journey that took them first to central Ukraine, then to Moldova,to Romania, onto Brussels and, finally, to France.

She said her daughter remembers Kyiv, and when she shows the girl photos on her phone, her daughter asks about who she sees and wonders what they are doing.

The paper identification that Makoviy stuffed in the pocket of her daughter's clothes as they fled Kyiv. (Submitted by Sasha Makoviy)

We had a peaceful, beautiful life," Makoviysaid, "and in one day, everything [turned]upside down and was really, really horrible."

WATCH | 'She remembers a lot,' Makoviy says of her daughter:

Ukrainian mother who fled war 'had a peaceful, beautiful life'

2 years ago
Duration 1:39
Sasha Makoviy says her two-year-old daughter remembers their life in Kyiv, despite fleeing the war three weeks ago.