Dear friend, Thank you for joining our global community. Mercy Corps’ urgent humanitarian response helps families in Ukraine and in the 40+ communities where we work around the world. The families that we are serving with the support of our generous donors and partners have shown strength, resilience, and grace in the midst of tragedy. It has been over two months since we mobilized a humanitarian response to the war in Ukraine. Since then, the crisis has become increasingly devastating and desperate as 5 million families have been forced to flee from the violence — and millions more have remained inside cities under siege. Our team members continue to support local partners in Ukraine, Poland, and Romania that are providing food, water, shelter, medication, and other supplies and services to families doing what they can to survive. The needs continue to grow and change as the conflict carries on, loved ones are separated, and homes are left in ruins. A family from Mariupol staying in a Mercy Corps-supported shelter in Lviv shared their harrowing journey to escape the city. Alla Mavrischeva and her two boys, ages 14 and 9, withstood more than a month under siege in their home with no electricity, water, or gas. They had no means of communication and the city was being destroyed around them.
Alla’s family is staying at a Mercy Corps-supported shelter in Lviv. She says that all she wants is the war to end, a place to live, and for her children to get a good education.
Day in and day out, they waited as their city was besieged, afraid they would lose their lives if they fled. Alla wrote down everything that happened each day in a special notebook so as not to forget anything. She said she did it in order to appreciate life more when their lives returned to normal. Finally, Alla saw their opportunity to slip away, noticing a group of other Ukrainians on the run. They joined them on a 10-day journey by foot going first to Zaporizhia, then Dnipro, and finally finding safety at our shelter in Lviv. Formerly a cultural center, the building now provides refuge to 40 displaced Ukrainian women with children. Many of those working at the shelter are refugees themselves. Alla said she and the boys have been so grateful for the support. They were able to rest, change clothes, drink water, and eat as much as they wanted.
The scale of this crisis will require a long-term commitment to help families recover and rebuild their lives. We are continuing to establish the greater presence needed in Ukraine and the surrounding region so we can fulfill this long-term commitment. Even as we help local partner organizations in the urgent response, we are building the teams and resources we will need to support the people of Ukraine for the future. A gift to Mercy Corps helps us to provide the urgent humanitarian aid needed today — and the long-term support needed in the weeks and months ahead — for families in crisis all over the world. As we stay the course to help people heal and reestablish their lives, one of the best ways you can continue to help is by starting a monthly donation to Mercy Corps. We call our monthly givers our Partners In Possibility because your gift helps families build toward brighter futures with new possibilities. Will you join us as a Partner In Possibility today? Sincerely, The Mercy Corps team |
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