“Ievguenia” plunges us into the diary-like thoughts of a young Ukrainian mother who once dreamed of sipping coffee in Paris but now picks up a rifle to defend her homeland. Damien Saez sings from her perspective, creating a vivid contrast between her cosmopolitan past — university days in France, fluent French, hopes of showing her kids the Eiffel Tower — and the brutal present of tanks rumbling toward her city. In powerful, almost cinematic images, she offers her own blood for freedom, insisting that "la liberté n’a pas de prix" and that it is better to die Ukrainian than to live under tyranny.
At its heart, the song is both an elegy and a rallying cry. It honors everyday heroes who refuse to surrender, linking Kyiv’s underground resistance to the spirit of French partisans in World War II. By repeating "Je m’appelle Ievguenia, je suis européenne morte au combat," Saez underscores the idea that democracy is a shared European struggle, not just a local conflict. The track paints one woman’s sacrifice as a universal stand for independence, reminding listeners that courage can spring from love of family, country, and the simple wish to live free.