The Jewish Chronicle

Convoy of orphans saved from war zone by hero father-of-ten

● Aid worker from north London saves 1,000 Ukrainian refugees

- BY DAVID ROSE AND MATHILDE FROT

► HUNDREDS OF Ukrainian orphans have been saved from the killing zone by a Jewish father-of-10 from north London in an extraordin­ary rescue operation.

In a two-week humanitari­an effort, aid worker Jeremy Posen braved the war in Ukraine and brought more than 1,000 Jews to safety himself, including 270 orphans.

Together with their carers and hundreds of other children, they are now safe in Romania, following a Herculean feat of logistics by Jewish charity Tikva.

Mr Posen, who planned and led the operation on the ground, told the JC that those rescued included babies a few weeks old, and children with diabetes who need daily injections of insulin.

He revealed that in the rescue’s first phase, refugees faced Russian airstrikes and shelling from the road as they left the Tikva “hub” in Odessa in 24 buses, accompanie­d by four food trucks.

“That first drive took more than 28 hours and it was very hairy,” Mr Posen said. “I knew we were doing the right thing because Odessa was likely to be attacked, but we could see shelling in the distance.

“We were held up at countless roadblocks, where the police and soldiers were coming on to the buses to check everyone and their papers. With so many young kids, it was quite tense.”

The cost of chartering the buses had already risen tenfold above usual rates. But halfway between Odessa and a refuge in western Ukraine — whose location Mr Posen declined to reveal — the drivers refused to go any further, “demanding still more”. Tikva had no choice but to pay up. Mr Posen, 53, who went to Golders Green’s Menorah Primary and Grammar schools, has been Tikva’s chief financial officer in Ukraine for three years.

His wife and younger children live in Israel, where he normally travels for Shabbat every week. But almost two

months ago, as the threat of war grew, he and his colleagues began to plan to rescue Tikva’s “one big family”.

After that, Mr Posen remained in Ukraine.

The charity set up a network of orphanages for Jewish children soon after Ukraine gained independen­ce in 1991, and many of its “alumni” have since married and had children of their own.

In the event of war, Mr Posen said, Tikva was determined to do everything it could to rescue all of them.

However, Ukraine imposed martial law on the first day of hostilitie­s, meaning that men under the age of 60 had to be left behind.

“In my head, I didn’t really believe Russia would invade,” Mr Posen told the JC. “But I thought: ‘Ok, we’ll make sure we have food to last three months and reserves of cash, and if we don’t need it immediatel­y, we can still use it over time.’ It was vital to have a plan.”

Odessa quickly became a staging post for orphans and families from other parts of the country, Mr Posen said.

A week before the Russian invasion, staff from an Israeli security firm arrived to help protect the convoy if the time came to leave.

Some of the children had undergone traumas, and were now facing new ones. He said: “We work closely with psychologi­sts. They came too.”

Mr Posen said that “as soon as we heard the first bomb, we gathered everyone at the command centres in Odessa”. Shortly afterwards, the convoy was ready to leave. “We left almost everything behind in Odessa,” he said. “All the infrastruc­ture that Tikva had built up over 30 years. Some alumni with young families own their apartments, but they left with one wheelie suitcase each. We don’t know if we’ll ever see what we left behind again. I didn’t even have a suitcase — only hand luggage.”

Once the 1,000-strong convoy reached the refuge, more than 200 refugees, including many orphans, were able to cross quickly into nearby Moldova.

The rest, Mr Posen said, faced a long wait amid bureaucrat­ic delays. “Every night I spent making lists for the next day,” Mr Posen said. “I’ve not had much sleep in days.” From Moldova, they travelled to Romania. The last three refugees, plus Mr Posen, arrived in Romania on Wednesday. An appeal has raised close to £2m for the charity.

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 ?? ?? Rescued: One of the children bussed out of Odessa by Jeremy Posen (right)
Rescued: One of the children bussed out of Odessa by Jeremy Posen (right)
 ?? PHOTO: TIKVA ODESSA ?? Escape: some of the children who were on the convoy
PHOTO: TIKVA ODESSA Escape: some of the children who were on the convoy

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