Louder than words
Since childhood, Daria Kozyreva was always “very independent, confident and self-motivated”, according to her mother, Marina. “Once my daughter turned 18, I no longer had any control over her. She made her decisions with or without my say so. She almost always knew what she wanted.”
After the war began, it was Daria who took the decision to become a doctor, reasoning that during wartime medics were the people best able to do the most good for others. She was accepted into the medical faculty at St. Petersburg State University shortly afterwards.
“I got it into my head that I wanted to save people and bring them back from the brink of death,” Kozyreva told independent St. Petersburg news site Bumaga in January. “But by the end of my first term I was no longer so sure that a career as a doctor was right for me. And they didn’t give me a chance to reconsider, anyway.”
Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine not only prevented Kozyreva from finishing her studies, it changed her entire life.
“Dasha put a dove of peace on her VK avatar on day one of the war” recalls her boyfriend Denis Garadzhayev, using the diminutive form of her name. “The war put her into an extremely volatile emotional state as she’s not the kind of person who can look at such things with indifference.”
While Kozyreva did not take part in public protests against the war, Garadzhayev said she was “horrified by what was happening” and started writing anti-war social media posts almost immediately after the invasion.