Strilky, Lviv Oblast

Strilky (Стрілки) is a village in Sambir Raion, Lviv Oblast (in the Carpathians, on the banks of the Dniester River). It is the administrative and cultural center of the Strilky rural hromada, which includes 21 villages.

As of 2021, according to official data, the population is 2,175, with 1,587 being adults.

History
Archaeological research in the 1990s indicates that the lands of the village of Strilky have been a refuge for human civilization since ancient times. Upon entering the village from the Upper Luzhko on the south side of the railway line, on the right bank of the Topilchanka River (a right tributary of the Dniester), at an elevation of 8-10 meters above the floodplain, a Bronze Age settlement was discovered (late 3rd to early 1st millennium BCE). On the northeastern outskirts of the village, approximately 0.5 km in the same direction from the boarding school, where the Olenka stream flows on its right bank, a settlement of the Frankish Galstatt culture was found.

Known since 1437, there was once a wooden-earth fortress on the left bank of the Dniester (now the Mlyny hamlet).

In the 19th century, the settlement had its own symbolism: a seal depicting two human figures - a knight aiming a musket at a Tatar who hides behind a shield. The notable researcher Z. Stshetelska-Hrynberhova remarked on this: "The figures on this seal have ancient features in their attire... The headgear of one of them is quite distinctive - similar to what the Tatars used."

In 1877, the village had one water sawmill (tartak wodny), one with a sawdust collector (gatrów), and one with regular sawdust (pił zwyczajnych), producing 560 cubic meters of planks and beams at a price of 3 golden Rhenish for a cubic meter.

Since 1894, Strilky had a school with Ukrainian-language instruction. The local school is now named after Mykhailo Verbytskyi, a Ukrainian composer, choir conductor, Greek Catholic priest, public figure, and the author of the music for the national anthem of Ukraine, "Shche ne vmerla Ukraina" ("Ukraine's Glory Has Not Perished").

As of 1904, the Strilky community (including the hamlets of Lysytsia and Mlyny) had 4,580 residents.

In 1905, a railway line was laid through the village, connecting Lviv with Uzhhorod.

In 1944, the front line passed through here, and the village was completely burned down, leaving only two houses. The church was also hit by a mortar shell, damaging the doors. Signs of these fragments are still visible. The icon of St. Eustathius and the old Liturgical Book were damaged by shrapnel. The old metric books did not survive – they were taken to the archives.

In 1940–1941 and 1949–1959, it was the center of the Strilky Raion.

Near the village, on May 1, 1949, a battle involving the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) took place.

During the national liberation struggle of the 1940s and 1950s, the village of Strilky had a widespread underground network of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). These units operated throughout the region against both German and Soviet occupiers. Hundreds of local young men joined the UPA, and those who couldn't go to the forest did whatever they could to support the insurgents. However, the struggle was uneven, and many villagers fell into the hands of the NKVD. Elderly residents recount that where the town council is now located, there used to be an NKVD branch. Interrogations, torture, and executions took place here, and the bodies of the fallen insurgents were thrown into a well. It often happened that bodies were taken to the railway tracks and buried there. Only at night did relatives come to identify the victims and bury their loved ones.

In 1992, at the initiative of a resident of the village and active community leader, Mykhailo Havrylyk, excavations were conducted on the riverbank, revealing 138 remains of human victims of the communist regime. These remains were reburied in the center of the village near the railway station. Among the numerous remains, a grandmother from a neighboring village recognized her son, whose hands and legs were bound with barbed wire, and his skull was smashed with a hammer.

In 2023, the village of Strilky, along with surrounding villages, became part of the network of historical and tourist routes "BoykoMandry" ("BoykoTravel") which is being created with the support of the Ukrainian Cultural Foundation (УКФ) and the Strilky rural hromada.