The Guardian (USA)

Ukrainian children orphaned by war ‘need a tremendous amount of help’

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

Since Russian troops invaded Ukraine a little more than a year ago, some in the US have shown their support for the encroached country by volunteeri­ng to fight for it while others have called on politician­s to equip the defenders with munitions and weapons.

Randi Thompson is calling on Americans to ponder another way: aiding efforts to place Ukrainian children orphaned by the Russian invasion in new families within their country.

Thompson is the president, chief executive officer and co-founder of the Los Angeles-based non-profit Kidsave, which is dedicated to connecting older children in institutio­nalized care around the world with families to adopt them. The group had worked in Ukraine for six years before the invasion by Russian forces on 24 February 2022 made a bad situation worse.

Officials estimate there were more than 105,000 children across 700 orphanages, boarding schools and other institutio­ns in Ukraine when the war there started – that’s more than 1% of the nation’s underage population and Europe’s highest rate of youth institutio­nalization.

Numbers since then are harder to track as children have been evacuated and moved out of Ukraine’s institutio­nalized care for safety reasons. But there’s reason to think things have gotten only harder for Ukraine’s orphans.

At least 6,000 Ukrainian children have been forced into camps and facilities across Russia – without parental consent – by the invaders, according to a report from the Conflict Observator­y, which is supported by the US state department. And Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Andriy Kostin, has said his teams have documented more than 14,000 instances of Ukrainian children being forced into adoption in Russia since the invasion, which shows no signs of ending anytime soon.

“There’s no question that the fighting is going to continue,” Thompson said. “The suffering is going to continue.”

According to Thompson, Ukraine has made it a clear priority to keep in the country any of its children who are in need of adoption as opposed to sending them abroad. And Kidsave has done what it can, investing a million dollars from its coffers into its operations in Ukraine, according to Thompson.

The group first used cargo vans to move to safety nearly 120 children that the organizati­on had placed with families.

It then bought 17 more vehicles for its fleet, including 22-passenger sprinters, buses with capacities of 50 to 62 passengers, and cargo trucks, including an 18-wheeler with refrigerat­ion.

That fleet has crossed checkpoint­s, gone into towns ensnared by conflict and helped evacuate more than 30,000 people while also assisting in the delivery of more than 1,000 tons of humanitari­an aid, with Kidsave staffers and their charges sometimes having to navigate behind the invaders’ lines using satellite phones, night vision goggles, protective gear and helmets, Thompson said.

Among those whom Kidsave evacuated were three children – ages three, four and six – whose mother died from an illness after she had left her physically abusive husband and took them with her. They had moved in with a loving, attentive foster family whose home ended up surrounded by shelling and bombing.

The foster parents were unable to leave, but they made arrangemen­ts to move the children out of the conflict zone and, through Kidsave, place them with another family in Ukraine, moti

vated – as Thompson put it – by a nationwide sense of, “I’m going to be my brother’s keeper now.”

In a statement provided to the Guardian, Ukraine-based Kidsave staff member Olena Shulha described how the children told stories, drew pictures, played and watched cartoons until they fell fast asleep during a two-day, nonstop trip of nearly 1,100 miles that was not devoid of explosions and shelling.

Shulha said the children were happy to brave the trek after being told there was “a new life waiting for them, full of interestin­g moments, love and care, new friends and discoverie­s”.

“We explained to them that there was a new family who would take care of them in a safe place,” Shulha wrote. “We pray that their little hearts will never again experience separation­s, wars and disappoint­ments.”

While many of her compatriot­s may be unable to help prolong such work by physically getting on the ground in Ukraine, Thompson said a new campaign offers them the chance to get involved from a distance.

The Flat Sasha project centers on a cartoon depiction of a 12-year-old child who has been displaced from a Ukrainian orphanage by the Russian invasion. It can be printed out, decorated and displayed in cars, schools, offices or social media, and anyone with a smartphone can scan a QR code on the caricature that links to informatio­n about children in institutio­nalized care in war-torn Ukraine.

The QR link does offer the opportunit­y to donate money that would provide food, medicine, shelter, fuel and counseling services to the children with whom Kidsave works. The donations would also aid the constructi­on of a center in Ukraine aimed at providing mentorship, therapy and other emotional support services to children trying to grow up in conflict.

But, if nothing else, just becoming aware – and spreading the awareness – that Ukrainian needs go beyond military aid is vital as the war slogs through its second year, according to Thompson.

“We want Americans to [realize] these children still need a tremendous amount of help,” Thompson said.

 ?? Photograph: Courtesy of Kidsave ?? Children in Ukraine with whom the group Kidsave has worked ride a bus in 2022.
Photograph: Courtesy of Kidsave Children in Ukraine with whom the group Kidsave has worked ride a bus in 2022.
 ?? Photograph: Courtesy of Kidsave ?? Children in Ukraine head to a Kidsave bus. ‘There’s no question the fighting is going to continue,’ Randi Thompson says. ‘The suffering is going to continue.’
Photograph: Courtesy of Kidsave Children in Ukraine head to a Kidsave bus. ‘There’s no question the fighting is going to continue,’ Randi Thompson says. ‘The suffering is going to continue.’

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