Orlando Sentinel

‘A matter of existentia­l importance’

Grassroots groups in Baltic states, Poland strive to aid Ukraine

- By Kostya Manenkov and Liudas Dapkus

TALLINN, Estonia — In a dusty workshop in northern Lithuania, a dozen men are transformi­ng hundreds of wheel rims into potbelly stoves to warm Ukrainians huddled in trenches and bomb shelters.

As the sparks subside, one welder marks the countertop: 36 made that day.

Hours later, they’ve reached 60.

People from across Lithuania send old wheel rims to the volunteers gathering weekly in Siauliai, the Baltic country’s fourth-largest city. Two cars loaded with wood stoves wait outside the workshop ahead of the long night drive south.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine nearly a year ago, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia — three states on NATO’s eastern flank scarred by decades of Soviet-era occupation — have been among the top donors to Kyiv.

Linas Kojala, director of the Europe Studies Center in Lithuania’s capital Vilnius, said Ukraine’s successful resistance “is a matter of existentia­l importance” to the Baltic countries, which share its experience of Russian rule.

“Not only political elites, but entire societies are involved in supporting Ukraine,” Kojala said.

In Siauliai, Edgaras Liakaviciu­s said his team has sent about 600 stoves to Ukraine.

“Everybody here ... understand­s the situation of every man, every soldier, the conditions they live in now in Ukraine,” said Liakaviciu­s, who works for a local metal processing plant.

Jaana Ratas, who heads an effort in Tallinn, Estonia to make camouflage nets, echoed his words.

“My family and most Estonians, they still remember (the Soviet occupation),” she said.

Ratas chose a symbolic location for her project. Five days a week, Estonian and Ukrainian women gather at Tallinn’s Museum of Occupation­s and Freedom to weave the nets from donated fabrics.

Lyudmila Likhopud, a 76-year-old refugee from Ukraine’s Zaporizhzh­ia region, said the work has lifted her out of depression.

“I started feeling that I can be useful,” she said.

In Latvia’s capital of Riga, Anzhela Kazakova — who ran a furniture store in the Black Sea port of Odesa — is one of 30 Ukrainian refugees working for Atlas Aerospace, a drone manufactur­er that has supplied more than 300 kits to the Ukrainian army.

Ivan Tolchinsky, Atlas Aerospace’s founder and CEO, grew up in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, held by Kremlin-backed separatist­s since 2014. He had long petitioned both the EU and Ukraine to supply drones to Kyiv’s forces fighting the separatist­s. Final permission arrived a day before Moscow’s full-scale invasion, he said.

Atlas Aerospace has since increased production twentyfold, Tolchinsky said, and is planning to open a site in Ukraine despite withering Russian strikes on infrastruc­ture.

Tolchinsky’s drones are just some of the weapons flowing to Kyiv from its Baltic allies. Together with their southern neighbor Poland — another NATO and European Union member with a history of Soviet oppression — the three small states rank among the biggest donors, per gross domestic product, helping Ukraine.

Lithuania, with just 2.8 million inhabitant­s, was the first country to send Stinger air defense missiles, according to Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov.

One of the latest Lithuanian initiative­s is a crowdfundi­ng drive to help Ukraine defend itself against Russian drones and missiles. Launched in late January, it initially aimed to raise 5 million euros, or about $5.35 million, by the first anniversar­y of the Feb. 24 invasion.

That goal was reached within weeks, and organizers have since doubled it as donations keep flowing.

One fundraisin­g group has grown into a major player that participat­es in internatio­nal tenders purchasing military equipment for Kyiv.

“We have expanded 10 times in less than a year. (We used to supply) five drones in one batch, but now it’s 50 or more,” said Jonas Ohman, founder of the nongovernm­ental organizati­on Blue/ Yellow.

The group recently won a bid for military optics, edging out rivals including the Indian military, and clinched a contract with an Israeli company for multipurpo­se high-sensitivit­y radars for Kyiv.

“It’s entirely another level now,” Ohman said.

In Poland, millions of zlotys have been raised to fund everything from advanced weapons to treating the wounded. Backed by over 220,000 contributo­rs, journalist Slawomir Sierakowsk­i was able to gather almost 25 million zlotys — about $5.6 million — to buy an advanced Bayraktar drone for Ukraine.

Ohman, the head of the Lithuanian NGO, drew parallels between his compatriot­s’ readiness to help Kyiv and local partisan movements fighting Soviet rule after World War II.

“It is about personal responsibi­lity in tough times,” he said. “Just like in 1945 when (the) Soviets returned, the government was gone, but the struggle for freedom continued in the woods for years.”

 ?? SERGEI GRITS/AP ?? A volunteer metalworke­r fashions a heating stove from old car rims Feb. 2 in a workshop in Siauliai, Lithuania, northwest of the capital Vilnius.
SERGEI GRITS/AP A volunteer metalworke­r fashions a heating stove from old car rims Feb. 2 in a workshop in Siauliai, Lithuania, northwest of the capital Vilnius.

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