Photo: Scott Olson/Getty
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Two Ukrainian couples, all members of the 14th Mechanized Brigade, have wed just months after they were brought together.
Khrystyna Lyuta, 23, and Volodymyr Mykhalchuk, 28, tied the knot Sunday alongside Kristina and Vitaliy Orlich, both 23, according toAgence France-Presse. The double wedding took place in front of a registry office in Druzhkivka, a town about 25 miles away from the frontlines, according toAgence France-Presse.
The celebration marked the “first marriage in the brigade in wartime” since the start of the Russian invasion, priest Yuriy Zdebskiy told the AFP.
“War is war, but life goes on,” Lyuta told AFP, regarding the weddings.
Added fellow bride Kristina, “I believe that this is about creating a new family — it doesn’t matter where it happens or how.”
Scott Olson/Getty
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Sunday’s wedding came over three months after Russian forceslaunched a large-scale invasionon Feb. 24 — the first major land conflict in Europe in decades.
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Still, romance has blossomed between the two couples, who may not otherwise have met.
Mykhalchuk and Lyuta, for instance, learned that they had lived about five kilometers apart in the same region for most of their lives and never knew each other until they met two months ago, per the AFP.
Despite only knowing each other for a short amount of time, Mykhalchuk told the news agency that getting married wasn’t a “hasty decision.”
“The main thing is that we love each other and we want to be together,” he said.
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At the wedding, Kristina wore a traditional white-and-red dress for the occasion while Lyuta donned boots and camouflage pants, which she matched with a traditional red Ukrainian blouse, according to the AFP.
Although their family members weren’t in attendance, Kristina said her mother, who has spoken to Orlich online, already calls him “a son.”
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After the ceremony, however, it was back to business. The four soldiers were expected to report for duty the same day as their wedding, according to the AFP.
“I can’t give them free days as such,” brigade commander Oleksandr Okhrimenko told the news agency, though he did make one promise.
“The only thing is that they won’t be on the frontline,” the commander added. “They will stay in the rear.”
source: people.com