In 2013, she joined the
Euromaidan protests as a volunteer medic, where she adopted her
nom de guerre, "Taira". She began by providing medical care to wounded protesters under fire on
Hrushevsky Street in her native Kyiv, and decided to remain on the front lines with other like-minded volunteers. She taught tactical medicine at military training grounds, and, later, on the front lines. Following the outbreak of the
Russo-Ukrainian War in 2014, Paievska served as a volunteer medic and trainer in eastern
Donbas, where she remained until 2018. She worked as a liaison between civilians and the military in front-line towns that lacked medical personnel. In her first year in Donbas, she formed a volunteer ambulance corps that treated both civilian and military casualties, which eventually gained the moniker "Taira's Angels". Paievska is credited with training over 100 medics, and Taira's Angels is credited with saving hundreds of wounded civilians and military personnel from all sides of the conflict. During her four-year tour in Donbas, Paievska served throughout the front lines, including in
Shchastia,
Popasna,
Zolote,
Avdiivka,
Svitlodarsk, and
Shyrokyne, treating civilians, Ukrainian soldiers, and separatist militants. In 2017, she appeared in
Invisible Battalion, a documentary about six women fighting in the Russo-Ukrainian War in Donbas. In 2018, she joined the Ukrainian military. Her unit deployed to
Mariupol where she commanded the 61st Mobile Hospital. Paievska was demobilized from the Ukrainian military in 2020, but she and her "Angels" continued to work there as volunteer medics. In January 2019, David Gauvey Herbert interviewed Paievska for
Bloomberg News. He described Paievska as a former member of
Right Sector, a leading ultranationalist group. Herbert reported that Paievska left Right Sector amid infighting. == Bodycam video ==