Lodi News-Sentinel

Order of nuns works to get medicine, supplies to Ukraine

- Jeff Gammage

PHILADELPH­IA — The Sisters of St. Basil never put out so much as a leaflet seeking donations for Ukraine.

It wasn’t necessary. Stuff simply started showing up.

Sleeping bags. Medicines. Clothing. Children’s games. Socks for soldiers. Baby bottles, wipes, diapers and strollers, walkers and wheelchair­s, soap, toothpaste and toothbrush­es, water bottles, Ramen noodles, granola bars, fruit rolls, and at least 40 bags of Pirate Booty snacks.

And money. More than $100,000.

People knew the Ukrainian American sisters would figure out how to get the supplies and currency from the motherhous­e in Jenkintown, Pennsylvan­ia, into cities in Ukraine, and from there into the hands of people who need it.

On Thursday, a tractor trailer stacked floor to ceiling pulled out from the parking lot on Fox Chase Road, headed to the New York City metro area, the goods to be transferre­d onto ships or planes bound for Eastern Europe. A second truck was being loaded on Friday, while tons of additional donations, boxed and stacked in 10-foot towers in a downstairs auditorium, awaited their turn to depart.

“A very busy time,” Sister Dorothy Ann Busowski said in measured understate­ment.

For the sisters, the Russian attack on Ukraine has turned the motherhous­e into an action center, spurring to new, rigorous duty an order that came to Philadelph­ia more than a century ago to serve immigrants and orphans.

The convent has become a departure point not just for supplies, but for one Ukrainian nun who was headed into the war zone last week. And it’s a new home to one sister who managed to escape the country after surviving an intense Russian shelling.

“I was there, with 30 sisters, when they bombed,” said Sister Dia Zagurska, who endured long-range missile attacks in Ivano-Frankivsk. “We understood our lives had changed. It wasn’t going to be the same.”

Many of the 30-some sisters of the Order of St. Basil the Great are in their 70s, 80s, and 90s. Some are retired, some in active ministry, all Ukrainian or of Ukrainian heritage. Most have family in the country and the majority speak the language, often learned at home as first- or second-generation immigrants.

Some worked teaching at nearby St. Basil Academy, which closed last year amid shrinking enrollment and funding. Others taught at schools in Chicago, Detroit, and New York.

“At times the situation in Ukraine can feel beyond hope,” said Sister Joann Sosler, the provincial superior.

But it’s not hopeless, she insisted, the proof apparent in the generosity of scores of people who give to help Ukraine endure. Some volunteers brought their own boxes and tape to help pack. The prayers ship free.

“I’ve shared with the sisters there [in Ukraine],” Sister Sosler said, “‘Know that the people here are with you.’”

The goods are going to Basilian sisters in places such as Poland, Romania, and Hungary — the Order of St. Basil is internatio­nal — and then into Ukraine. The plan is for about a third to go to sisters in Lviv, and another third to those in IvanoFrank­ivsk, and all distribute­d from there to people in western Ukraine.

The final third, mostly medical supplies and clothing, will go to the Ukraine military.

“People have really opened their hearts,” said Sister Teodora Kopyn, who was born and raised in western Ukraine, and whose sisters, brother, nieces, and nephews remain in the country. “Our people, they try to do the best for their lives, for their nation, for their family. Now everyone has to leave their home.”

 ?? ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Sister Dorothy Ann Busowski, left, and Sister Joann Sosler in the auditorium at Sisters of St. Basil in Jenkintown, Pa., which has become a staging area for donations awaiting shipment to assist people in Ukraine, on April 13.
ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Sister Dorothy Ann Busowski, left, and Sister Joann Sosler in the auditorium at Sisters of St. Basil in Jenkintown, Pa., which has become a staging area for donations awaiting shipment to assist people in Ukraine, on April 13.

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