Kharkiv College of Arts became home for 77 people who were forced to evacuate from the war zone. These are women, children, and elderly people who are unable to provide for themselves. To ensure their nutrition, we delivered them long-term storage food products.
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In the family, there are 10 children aged 6 to 17, including 7 girls and 3 boys. Currently, they reside in the Lviv region (twice displaced from the Donetsk region). Their hometown is occupied, and their house is destroyed. They have started a new life, but it’s challenging for such a large family. Their needs are immense, and coping with everything is difficult, so they greatly need support.
The Shkuropat family-type children’s home from Dnipropetrovsk region has 7 children living there, 5 of whom are fostered. This family is preparing to take in three more children, and they’re arranging a separate room for them. It’s crucial to support such families. Therefore, we’ve provided a bunk bed, bedding sets, pillows, as well as hygiene products and household chemicals.
We procured and delivered a refrigerator, kitchen utensils, and laundry detergent for Natalia Rodnykh’s family-type children’s home. Located in the Kyiv region, the family consists of 9 foster children, resettled from Berislav, Kherson region. The provided assistance is crucial for ensuring comfortable and adequate living conditions for the children.
We’ve provided crucial assistance to Ruslan Voloshchuk’s family-type children’s home in the form of furniture and medication for their foster son, Nikita Zhigunov. The family, consisting of 8 children, resides in the Odessa region, having relocated from the Kherson region. We supplied two writing desks, chairs, and a dining set, essential for the children’s comfort and education, as they currently lack these necessities. The youngest child, Nikita (born in 2014), suffers from acute glomerulonephritis and requires costly treatment.
We provided assistance in the form of a freezer and chairs to Anna Shatyrko’s family-type children’s home. Anna, a dedicated and loving mother, single-handedly raises 7 adopted children and 2 biological ones, aged 5 to 17. The Russian aggression against Ukraine has been a tragedy for the Shatyroko family, who reside in the Chernihiv region. Direct hostilities in their village resulted in severe damage to almost a third of their home. However, the family has endured all trials and is in the process of rebuilding their home.
We’ve provided five tablets to Natalia Korabelnikova’s family-type children’s home in Cherkasy.The family includes five daughters, aged 10 to 17, who, despite being displaced from the Donetsk region and facing numerous challenges, actively engage in diverse activities such as dance, theater, English studies, drawing, and singing, demonstrating resilience and determination in their pursuit of a fulfilling life. Lacking sufficient devices for simultaneous online learning, we’ve supplied tablets to support their education.
We’ve provided a dryer for Antonina Kiselova’s family, who currently reside in Kropyvnytskyi. Since their evacuation from Donetsk region on April 9, 2022, they’ve faced significant challenges, leaving behind their home and possessions. With nine children aged 11 to 19 under their care, they’ve settled into a three-bedroom apartment, diligently working to rebuild their lives from scratch.
Yana and her husband raise 9 children, 6 of them are adopted. There are five schoolchildren and two students in the family, but unfortunately for all of them, there is not enough computer equipment, which today is an integral part of education. Therefore, we provided them with the laptop.
Before the full-scale invasion, they lived in the city of Bilozerske in the Donetsk region, but due to hostilities they were forced to move to the city of Cherkasy.
The Rozhko family with 10 children lived in the Kherson region, but with the beginning of a full-scale invasion, they had to leave their home. That’s how they ended up in Odessa. Tetiana and her children need support, because the family’s finances are limited.
To furnish their new home, we provided them with a wardrobe, chairs and table lamps.
The family has 7 children aged 9 to 20. During the war, Svitlana and her children survived shelling in Kharkiv and moved to a safe area in Zakarpattia Oblast. Here children grow, develop and dream safely. Each of them has their preferences and interests – from reading and drawing to football and baking.
For them, we purchased and delivered food supplies in the form of cereals, flour, sugar, oil, pasta, canned meat and fish, etc.