Kane Republican

One year on, Ukrainians in U.S. cope with war, displaceme­nt

- By Thalia Beaty

PORT READING, N.J. ( AP) — In New York, far from her home in northern Ukraine, Valeriya Roshkovan tries to do what she can to end Russia's invasion of her country.

“I cannot sit and do nothing," she said earlier this month in a New Jersey warehouse where she volunteers with the nonprofit Razom for Ukraine, helping package donated firefighti­ng equipment to ship to her country.

Roshkovan, 41, fled Konotop, her city close to Ukraine's northern border with Belarus, soon after the fighting began in order to keep her teenage daughter safe. She had to leave her husband and other family behind.

“The town was surrounded, all the artillery was pointed at the town and most of the exits were already in the hands of Russia,” Roshkovan said through another volunteer who translated her words.

“We had the hope that it's going to finish very soon, that the war will be over,” she added. “And that we will be able to come back quickly.”

As the first anniversar­y of Russia's invasion approaches Friday, that hope is diminished. Roshkovan has enrolled her teenage daughter in school. She's trying to get her to engage with their Brooklyn, New York, surroundin­gs and to stop dwelling on the war and their long escape, driving through Ukraine and several neighborin­g countries.

Last year, many Ukrainians living in America discovered Razom, a small nonprofit that started in 2014 with the mission to help make Ukraine more prosperous. In previous years, it had received around $200,000 in contributi­ons annually. In 2022, the number of donors jumped from around 4,000 to 170,000 and gifts now total at least $75 million, said Dora Chomiak, the organizati­on's president.

“A lot of people are just moved by the complete injustice of the bad guy next door to Ukraine, just destroying lives. People are moved by the resilience of the people of Ukraine,” she said.

The nonprofit stood up a logistics network, opened and staffed an office in Washington to advocate for Ukraine to lawmakers and granted at least $3 million to small nonprofits in Ukraine. They've held almost weekly protests in Times Square to try to keep the war in the public eye. Support for sending weapons and aid to Ukraine and for hosting Ukrainians displaced by the war among Americans has waned from May to January, a recent poll from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found.

Initially, Razom focused on sourcing and delivering tactical medical equipment and communicat­ions equipment to the frontlines, including to volunteer fighters.

“Tourniquet­s, chest seals, different bandages to either stop bleeding or give the first help at the battlefiel­d,” said Andriy Boychuk, 35, a businessma­n who has lived in the U.S. for 17 years and was leading the effort at the warehouse.

“If not us, who else?” he said, when asked why a nonprofit was sending supplies to the frontlines. More recently, it has shipped generators, wood burning stoves and candles to its warehouse in Lviv, tracking the shipments with a software program that Razom members developed themselves. Razom's staff in Ukraine then reloads the goods into vans to take where needed.

Boychuk and other volunteers said packing these supplies by hand is a kind of therapy for them, helping them feel like they are making a difference.

“It touches everybody," Boychuk said of the war. "And that's why I think we are here, because we want to help and try to not think what's going on there because it destroys people,”

The aid they send is in line with Razom's charitable mission, as well as import and export regulation­s, Chomiak said. But that line is sometimes difficult to navigate.

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