logo
Sobbing Ukrainian reveals she escaped Russia's invasion only for Iranian missile to destroy her new home in Israel

Sobbing Ukrainian reveals she escaped Russia's invasion only for Iranian missile to destroy her new home in Israel

New York Post2 days ago

A Ukrainian make-up artist who escaped Russia's invasion sobbed Wednesday as she revealed her new home in Israel had been wiped out by an Iranian missile.
Tetiana Kurakova, 40, fled to the Jewish state from Kyiv in 2022 — and claimed that five other Ukrainian war refugees were among the nine killed Sunday as Iranian missiles rained down on her new home in Bat Yam, a city south of Tel Aviv.
'It felt like a nightmare. I can't even describe how big it was,' she said, breaking down in tears. 'I couldn't understand how I survived.'
Advertisement
3 Tetiana Kurakova, 40, fled to the Jewish state from Kyiv in 2022.
ABIR SULTAN/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Kurakova said she'd spent the last few years rebuilding her life since fleeing Ukraine — only for it to be obliterated once again.
'I feel terrified inside and outside. I feel terrified by the hopelessness,' she said.
Advertisement
'It's very painful. Each time, you don't know if you'll survive or not. Or whether you'll be in a situation where you won't even be found. Every time there is stress, it is painful. That was the reason I left Ukraine. I thought it wouldn't start here. I didn't understand that it was possible here.'
3 'I feel terrified inside and outside. I feel terrified by the hopelessness,' she said.
AP
The Iranian strike tore through the building next to hers, killing nine people and injuring dozens more.
Kurakova claimed five of the slain victims were other Ukrainians who had recently come to Israel to escape Russia's war.
Advertisement
Hundreds of homes, including Kurakova's, were also destroyed in the attack.
3 The Iranian strike tore through the building next to hers, killing nine people and injuring dozens more.
AP
Kurakova said she was able to salvage a few belongings but wasn't sure if she'd ever be able to return.
'I understood there was a strike, but at that time I didn't even pay attention to the house that was hit, because I very quickly went up to the second floor where I lived, to my apartment,' she recalled.
Advertisement
'I started pulling my suitcases very quickly, packing my things. At least some things, because I understood that maybe a strike was coming — and I needed to get ready fast.
'I thought I needed to quickly grab my documents, papers, some important things and run.'
With Post wires

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cubs legend Sammy Sosa returns to Wrigley Field after 20-plus-year hiatus
Cubs legend Sammy Sosa returns to Wrigley Field after 20-plus-year hiatus

Fox Sports

timean hour ago

  • Fox Sports

Cubs legend Sammy Sosa returns to Wrigley Field after 20-plus-year hiatus

Associated Press CHICAGO (AP) — Legendary Cubs slugger Sammy Sosa returned to Wrigley Field for the first time in more than 20 years on Friday before Chicago's afternoon game with the Seattle Mariners. Sosa, who is set to be inducted into the Cubs' team Hall of Fame this year, arrived at the iconic North Side ballpark in a black SUV. He was greeted by owner Tom Ricketts, who embraced him in a hug as he exited the vehicle. Sosa became the face of the Cubs franchise where he played 13 seasons after coming in a trade from the crosstown White Sox in March 1992. A seven-time All-Star, Sosa hit 545 homers in 1,811 games with the Cubs and hit a franchise-record 66 in 1998 when he was named the NL's MVP. Sosa, now 56, played his final game with the Cubs at Wrigley on Oct. 2, 2004, when he homered and had two hits in an 8-6 loss to Atlanta. During his years with the Cubs, Sosa appeared to bulk up drastically and was a headliner in a generation of baseball's biggest names linked to performance-enhancing drugs. The Cubs traded him to Baltimore with cash in February 2005 for three players. Sosa appeared to acknowledge using performance-enhancing drugs in December when he released a statement saying he was sorry for mistakes, without specifying them. 'There were times I did whatever I could to recover from injuries in an effort to keep my strength up to perform over 162 games,' he said in the statement. 'I never broke any laws. But in hindsight, I made mistakes and I apologize.' On Friday morning, Sosa posed for photos with rising Cubs star Pete Crow-Armstrong outside the team's clubhouse and a video showed Sosa embracing manager Craig Counsell in his office before the game. '(Sosa) saw the wind blowing out today and planned this trip around a good day to be here,' Counsell joked. 'He asked to be in the lineup because the wind's blowing out.' The Cubs remained mum on any ceremony or event before or during Friday's game. In Thursday's 8-7 loss to Milwaukee, Crow-Armstrong went deep to set a new team record for reaching 20 homers and 20-plus stolen stolen bases the fastest, doing it in 73 games. Sosa had the old mark of 96, set in 1994. Counsell, who faced Sosa as a player, saluted the former slugger for his strength at the plate and long homers, as well as star power. 'Probably the best thing, Sammy was a true entertainer," Counsell said. "I think when you're in this long enough, you realize that's part of this. 'We're also here to entertain and I think Sammy was great at that.' ___ AP MLB: recommended

Barely half of this generation has seen ‘Jaws,' as Spielberg classic celebrates 50 years
Barely half of this generation has seen ‘Jaws,' as Spielberg classic celebrates 50 years

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Barely half of this generation has seen ‘Jaws,' as Spielberg classic celebrates 50 years

Their cinema knowledge bites! Barely half of Gen Z has seen the original summer blockbuster 'Jaws' compared to nearly 90% of people who came of age when the classic flick hit the silver screen. Steven Spielberg's pulse-pounding shark thriller — which first struck fear into the hearts of beachgoers exactly 50 years ago Friday — has only been viewed by 53% of 18- to 29-year-olds, according to a jaw-dropping new Gallup poll. By contrast, 88% of people over 65 years old have sunk their teeth into the flick, which held the No. 1 box office spot for 14 weeks and was the first film ever to rake in $100 million. 3 Barely half of Gen Z has seen the movie 'Jaws', according to a new poll. AP Pollsters cited no specific reason for why the generation that brought you the word 'cringe,' Crocs-as-fashion and TikTok activism wasn't hip to the movie — but its 2 hour, 10 minute running time might be a hint. Overall, 91% of people ages 50 to 64 and 78% of 30-to-49-year-olds reported seeing the spine-tingling flick, which centers on a massive man-eater that unleashes chaos on Long Island beach town. When the movie was released on June 20, 1975, it made giant waves in the US with viewers saying it scared them away from the water and increased their fear of sharks. The film was such a hit with young people at the time, a whopping 40% of 18-to-29-year-olds said they'd seen it by the end of summer 1975, according to a Gallup poll taken that year. 3 A total of 78% of Americans reported seeing 'Jaws' as of May 2025. AP At the time, 18% of viewers called it 'the most frightening movie' they had ever seen and 35% said the movie increased their fear of swimming in the ocean, according to the poll. 3 The classic movie stoked fears about sharks and swimming in the ocean. AP The more recent poll, conducted in May ahead of the movie's anniversary, notes a total of 78% of all US adults have seen 'Jaws.' It's ultimately not clear if a 53% viewership among Gen Z adults is high or low for a 50-year-old film without more cinema data to compare it to, pollsters said.

Giorgio Armani, 90, will not attend runway shows during Milan Fashion Week
Giorgio Armani, 90, will not attend runway shows during Milan Fashion Week

Hamilton Spectator

time3 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Giorgio Armani, 90, will not attend runway shows during Milan Fashion Week

MILAN (AP) — Giorgio Armani will not be present to take his bows after the Emporio Armani and Giorgio Armani runway shows at the upcoming Milan Fashion Week, his fashion house announced on Friday. The designer is 'currently recovering at home,' the fashion house said in a statement. It did not provide additional details about his condition. Armani, 90, is marking 50 years of his eponymous fashion house this year. He turns 91 on July 11. 'Although he cannot be there in person, he will closely follow every phase of the shows,″ the statement said. His longtime collaborator and head of menswear design, Leo Dell'Orco, will give the closing bows, it added. The Spring Summer 2026 Emporio Armani menswear collection will be previewed on Saturday during Milan Fashion Week. The Giorgio Armani menswear collection is scheduled to close the mostly menswear shows on Monday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store