In April 2022, the photos taken around her home stunned the world. Oksana, 57, brandishes her index finger, and the images resurface.

“These are war crimes, and they will be recognized as genocide,” predicts President Volodymyr Zelensky. Less than two years later, the massacre disappeared from this suburban landscape beaten by an icy wind. The town of Boutcha, on the outskirts of kyiv, became the symbol of Ukraine's martyrdom.