‘The Bachelor,’ Ukraine edition, features a veteran who lost both legs in the war

KYIV, Ukraine — Oleksandr Budko looks like a leading man. He’s sandy-haired and blue-eyed, with muscular tattooed arms and the chiseled face of a movie star.

“I’m a military veteran, an activist and writer. And I’m also The Bachelor,” he says in this season’s Ukrainian edition of the popular reality TV franchise.

The Bachelor, or Kholostiak in Ukrainian, is produced by Starlight Media and Warner Bros. International Television, and it airs on STB, a Ukrainian channel. This season, its 13th, premiered on Nov. 1. 

Inna Bielien, 29, a German language translator, poses for a portrait at home in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Dec. 13. She is one of the female contestant of the Ukrainian version of the TV show The Bachelor.
Inna Bielien, 29, a German language translator, poses for a portrait at home in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Dec. 13. She is one of the female contestant of the Ukrainian version of the TV show The Bachelor. (Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR)

In one episode, Budko is on a rock-climbing date with a wholesome translator named Inna Bielien.

“Oh my God,” she says, as she hangs off the cliff.

“Don’t worry, I will be very close, right behind you,” he says, as he helps her scale the rock face.

What goes unsaid is that Budko is doing this on prosthetic legs, clearly visible because he’s wearing shorts. He’s a double amputee. He represents the tens of thousands of Ukrainians who have lost limbs since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. An adviser to Ukraine’s Sports and Youth Ministry put the number at around 100,000 last year.

Oleksandr Budko, with the call sign Teren, lost both legs on the front line in Ukraine's battle against the Russian invasion.
Oleksandr Budko, with the call sign Teren, lost both legs on the front line in Ukraine’s battle against the Russian invasion. (Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR)

Their visibility — in fashion magazines, on catwalks and now a popular reality TV series — shows how much the war has affected Ukraine.

“Still,” he tells NPR in an interview, “there is still a problem with stigma. I went on The Bachelor to help address it.”

“I realized then I would lose my legs”

Budko, 28, grew up in western Ukraine and was working as a barista in a coffeeshop in Kyiv when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. He enlisted and was soon on the front line. That summer, his unit had stalled while trying to push Russian troops out of northeastern Ukraine. During a lull in the fighting, the unit decided to rest. Budko lay down in a trench.

“Then something hit that caused the trench to crumble,” he says.

Russian troops had shelled the trench. Budko was buried in earth, twisting in pain as his fellow soldiers dug him out.

“I was conscious the entire time,” he says. “And I also realized then that I would lose my legs.”

Budko recovered through intensive, and often excruciating, physical therapy. He threw himself into sports, even competing in swimming at the 2023 Invictus Games. He also wrote a book and performed in a modern ballet.

“There was no point in me being angry at anyone or anything about what happened,” he said. “It was better to do something good instead.”

Oleksandr Budko tries to ride a unicycle at the Recovery rehabilitation center in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. He goes to rehabilitation centers to share the information on the process of his recovery, logistics to obtain prosthetics and about the possibilities for injured veterans.
Oleksandr Budko tries to ride a unicycle at the Recovery rehabilitation center in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. He goes to rehabilitation centers to share the information on the process of his recovery, logistics to obtain prosthetics and about the possibilities for injured veterans. (Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR)

In the opening to The Bachelor, he jumps on a motorcycle, tucks a red rose into his leather vest-jacket, and speeds away. Each episode features beautiful young women vying for his attention, often with the built-in melodrama typical of reality shows.

“I wanted to show the possibilities,” he says. “I wanted to give people faith.”

“You are examples of courage and heroism”

The people he’s talking about are fellow wounded veterans. Budko visits them often, and they’re a tough crowd — exhausted, skeptical, emotionally distant.

“They never allow themselves to show any feelings of failure,” he says.

On a recent afternoon, he stops by a hospital in Kyiv where dozens of veterans are recovering from amputations. He cringes when he hears their screams of pain during physical therapy.

Injured soldiers at the Recovery rehabilitation center listen to Oleksandr Budko, a 28-year-old veteran, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. During his visits to rehabs, soldiers ask Budko lots of practical questions about things like prosthetics and health care.
Injured soldiers at the Recovery rehabilitation center listen to Oleksandr Budko, a 28-year-old veteran, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. During his visits to rehabs, soldiers ask Budko lots of practical questions about things like prosthetics and health care. (Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR)

Budko walks into a room filled with wounded soldiers in wheelchairs and sitting on beds. He introduces himself with his military call sign, Teren. It’s the name of a thorny wild plum. In Ukrainian folklore, it symbolizes obstacles and overcoming them.

“Do not focus only on your injury, because remember — you are examples of courage and heroism,” he tells the soldiers. “You are not disabled.”

Rostyslav Andrusenko, a doctor helping the men recover, says many are depressed. They fear they will no longer be useful to their families or society.

“They ask me if they will ever walk again or play football with their friends or help their kids, all the everyday things that they did before,” Andrusenko says.

Oleksandr Budko, whose military call sign is Teren, talks to injured soldiers at the Recovery rehabilitation center in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18.
Oleksandr Budko, whose military call sign is Teren, talks to injured soldiers at the Recovery rehabilitation center in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. (Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR)

Budko gives a pep talk to the soldiers and also cracks a few jokes that don’t quite land. The men politely clap when he finishes and then ask a lot of practical questions, like where to get the best prosthetics.

Mykola Kovalenko, a married father of two, badly injured his leg on the front line after a mine exploded and may have to have it amputated. He asks Budko how to navigate medical bureaucracy, which he equates to “passing through the seven circles of hell.”

Budko promises to help, and Kovalenko finally cracks a smile. He says his wife and two teenage daughters love this season of The Bachelor.

Ukrainian war veteran Oleksandr Budko (right) talks to an injured soldier, Mykola Kovalenko, 36, at the Recovery rehabilitation center in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18.
Ukrainian war veteran Oleksandr Budko (right) talks to an injured soldier, Mykola Kovalenko, 36, at the Recovery rehabilitation center in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. (Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR)

“What he is doing is very helpful,” Kovalenko says. “He is showing guys like me, guys who are injured, that all is not lost, that we shouldn’t give up, that we should keep trying.”

Budko says soldiers rarely discuss their feelings about relationships and self-image with him. He does offer his number, though, in case they do want to talk at some point.

“Everyone has their own sensitive topics that they’re ashamed to talk about,” he says, including intimacy and the fear of being pitied by potential partners.

Love and war

Inna Bielien, 29, German language translator who is a contestant on the Ukrainian version of the TV show The Bachelor, shows a photo from behind the scenes of show, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Dec. 13.
Inna Bielien, 29, German language translator who is a contestant on the Ukrainian version of the TV show The Bachelor, shows a photo from behind the scenes of show, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Dec. 13. (Oksana Parafeniuk | for NPR)

The war has also touched the women on the show. One is a widow whose husband was killed on the front line. Another is a soldier. Inna Bielien, the translator on the rock-climbing date, is also a humanitarian volunteer who sources and sends supplies to Ukraine’s troops.

NPR meets her in her stylish apartment in a Kyiv neighborhood that’s often hit by Russian drones. She talks about a soldier, Vadym, she loved who was killed early in the war. She says she was still holding out hope when she got the call about him.

“I remember thinking, Lord, I hope he’s alive, even with no arms and no legs, because it is better to come back without limbs than not come back at all,” she says.

Even so, she says, many Ukrainians struggle to talk to wounded veterans.

“I was told that if you see a soldier, you say thank you and put your hand to your heart,” Bielien says. “Asking about amputations, whether that crosses personal boundaries, that is still new for us.”

Oleksandr Budko talks to a participant at the Donbas Media Forum conference in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. Budko, a Ukrainian veteran who lost both legs on the front line, stars in the Ukrainian version of the TV show The Bachelor.
Oleksandr Budko talks to a participant at the Donbas Media Forum conference in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Oct. 18. Budko, a Ukrainian veteran who lost both legs on the front line, stars in the Ukrainian version of the TV show The Bachelor. (Oksana Parafeniuk for NPR)

Budko says the series helped show that it’s OK to ask questions, especially when it comes to intimacy.

“Like, ‘Does it hurt when I touch your limbs there?’ and so on,” he says.

Budko says he feels he has done some good on the show. And he now has a girlfriend, but won’t say if it’s Bielien, who says she fell in love with him, or someone else.

He can’t reveal anything, he says, until the season finale on Friday.

Transcript:

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

Ukraine has its own version of the popular reality series “The Bachelor.” This season’s star is a young veteran and a double amputee. He represents the tens of thousands of Ukrainians who have lost limbs in a war that has profoundly changed this country. NPR’s Joanna Kakissis reports from Kyiv.

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: OK. Ready?

OLEKSANDR BUDKO: Tak. Yep.

JOANNA KAKISSIS, BYLINE: Oleksandr Budko is sandy-haired and blue-eyed, with muscular, tattooed arms and the chiseled face of a movie star. He also walks on prosthetic legs. He often has to explain how he got them…

BUDKO: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: …How, as a young soldier, he stopped to rest at a trench near the front line in northeastern Ukraine, how a mortar round hit that trench, burying him underground, how he twisted in pain as his fellow soldiers dug him out.

BUDKO: (Through interpreter) I was conscious the entire time. And I also realized then that I would lose my legs.

KAKISSIS: That was 2 1/2 years ago.

BUDKO: (Through interpreter) There was no point in me being angry at anyone or anything about what happened. It was better to do something good instead.

KAKISSIS: Budko recovered through excruciating physical therapy…

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER: In the men’s 50-meters freestyle…

KAKISSIS: …And sports.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED ANNOUNCER: …Oleksandr Budko of Ukraine.

KAKISSIS: He even competed in the Invictus Games last year. He also wrote a book and performed in a ballet.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

KAKISSIS: And now…

BUDKO: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: …He’s the bachelor.

BUDKO: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: In one clip, Budko jumps on a motorcycle, tucks a red rose into his jacket…

(SOUNDBITE OF MOTORCYCLE REVVING)

KAKISSIS: …And zooms away. In another, he’s at a train station, meeting a date – a translator named Inna Bielen.

BUDKO: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: She is all smiles as he helps her with her luggage.

INNA BIELEN: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: Then he takes her rock climbing…

BUDKO: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: …And helps her scale the cliff.

BUDKO: (Through interpreter) I wanted to show the possibilities. I wanted to give people faith.

KAKISSIS: The people he’s talking about are fellow wounded veterans.

(CROSSTALK)

KAKISSIS: Budko visits them often, and they’re a tough crowd – exhausted, skeptical, emotionally distant.

BUDKO: (Through interpreter) They never allow themselves to show any feelings or failure.

KAKISSIS: At this hospital in Kyiv, veterans are recovering from amputations. The physical therapy is grueling.

UNIDENTIFIED SOLDIER #1: (Groaning) Ugh, ah.

KAKISSIS: Budko introduces himself with his military call sign, Teren. It’s the name of a thorny wild plum. In Ukrainian folklore, it symbolizes obstacles and overcoming them.

BUDKO: (Through interpreter) Do not focus only on your injury, because remember – you are examples of courage and heroism. You are not disabled.

KAKISSIS: The wounded men thank Budko for the pep talk and clap.

UNIDENTIFIED SOLDIER #2: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: And then they ask him a bunch of practical questions, like where to get the best prosthesis. Mykola Kovalenko lost his leg after a mine exploded, and he wants to know how to navigate medical bureaucracy.

MYKOLA KOVALENKO: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: He compares applying for financial assistance to passing through the seven circles of hell. Budko promises to help, and Kovalenko finally cracks a smile.

KOVALENKO: (Through interpreter) What he is doing is very helpful. He is showing guys like me – guys who are injured – that all is not lost, that we shouldn’t give up, that we should keep trying.

KAKISSIS: He says his wife and two teenage daughters love this season of “The Bachelor.”

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, “THE BACHELOR (UKRAINE)”)

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: (Speaking Ukrainian).

KAKISSIS: The war has also touched the women on the show. One is a widow. Her husband was killed on the front line. Another is a soldier. Inna Bielen – the one on the rock-climbing date – she’s a volunteer sending supplies to Ukraine’s troops.

I’m Joanna. Nice to meet you.

BIELEN: Inna. Nice to meet you.

KAKISSIS: We meet Bielen in her Kyiv apartment, and she tells us about a soldier she loved who was killed early in the war. When she got the call about him, she was still holding out hope.

BIELEN: (Through interpreter) I remember thinking, Lord, I hope he’s alive, even with no arms and no legs, because it is better to come back without limbs than not come back at all.

KAKISSIS: Even so, she says, many Ukrainians struggle to communicate with wounded veterans.

BIELEN: (Through interpreter) I was told that If you see a soldier, you say, thank you, and put your hand to your heart. Asking about amputations, whether that crosses personal boundaries – that is still new for us.

KAKISSIS: Nevertheless, she says, she did fall in love with the bachelor, Oleksandr Budko. And he says he has fallen in love, too, but he won’t say with whom…

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

KAKISSIS: …At least not until the season finale.

Joanna Kakissis, NPR News, Kyiv.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

 

Scientists await signal from spacecraft after historic close encounter with the sun

To get so close, the Parker Solar Probe had to withstand the sun's extreme heat and radiation like no spacecraft before it.

Mega Millions jackpot surges past $1 billion

The Mega Millions prize has now grown to an estimated $1.15 billion, which could be the fifth-largest jackpot in the game's history.

Pope urges ‘all people of all nations’ to silence arms in Christmas address

Pope Francis in his traditional Christmas message urged "all people of all nations" to find courage "to silence the sounds of arms and overcome divisions" plaguing the world, from the Middle East to Ukraine, Africa to Asia.

A gang attack on a Haitian hospital reopening kills 2 reporters and a police officer

Street gangs forced the General Hospital in Port-au-Prince to close earlier this year. As journalists gathered to cover its reopening, suspected gang members opened fire.

Far from the front lines, Ukrainians fight a war to preserve their culture

In the Transcarpathia region, some locals embrace a traditional lifestyle and cultural identity. After surviving Soviet threats, now they fear President Vladimir Putin seeks to erase their culture.

Russia targets Ukrainian energy infrastructure on Christmas Day

Russia's massive missile and drone barrage struck a thermal power plant and prompted Ukrainians to shelter in metro stations on Christmas morning.

More Front Page Coverage