Save Ukraine’s mission includes reuniting families victimized by Russia’s deportations in occupied areas.
WASHINGTON — When the Russian Army took Kherson in southern Ukraine, the occupation authorities offered 16-year-old Anastasia a chance to go to Crimea, a holiday away from war, the officials told her mother.
But as days became weeks, Anastasia realized that she had not been given a vacation and that the Russians might not let her return home.
It was only when a nonprofit group, Save Ukraine, sent Anastasia’s mother on a bus to find her that she was able to get out. They now live in a shelter the organization runs in Kyiv, the capital.
Anastasia says she is glad to be alive and with family, as are other children living there.
“There are some people who feel sorry that they had to leave their home,” she said, speaking on the condition that her family name not be used. “But we are also very happy because we understand life is so much more than a house that might be destroyed. Now we have an opportunity to go on, to move forward again.”
In the 14 months since the Russian invasion, the U.S. Agency for International Development has provided $18 billion in humanitarian aid to Ukraine, including about $15.5 billion in direct support to the government to prop up its health care and education systems and to repair its power grid, which Russian forces have repeatedly targeted.
Beyond that assistance, the American aid agency has also sent grants to Ukrainian nonprofits that serve the war-battered population. Save Ukraine, founded after Russian forces attacked the country in 2014, is among them.
From the beginning, its aim has been to move Ukrainians living in occupied areas or near intense fighting into shelters or new homes.
Last May, with a grant from the aid agency, Save Ukraine set up a hotline to connect people affected by the invasion with medical and mental health care. The money has also helped the group handle evacuation requests and provide psychological counseling and legal assistance.
With a second grant, Save Ukraine opened a day care center in Kherson for children traumatized by the occupation.
Overall, U.S.A.I.D. has given $290,000 to Save Ukraine, just a drop in the bucket of overall U.S. assistance. But American officials say Ukrainians have shown how much they can do with what they are given.
“One of the most inspirational responses that we’ve seen of Ukrainians is that they are able to do things on a shoestring,” said Isobel Coleman, the agency’s deputy administrator. “The money that we have provided, in the context of the billions we have provided the government, is small. But it’s a small organization that can do things very effectively with small amounts of money.”
Private American donors and companies have also given Save Ukraine some $7 million. An American nonprofit, All Hands and Hearts, has provided money for 100 shelters and the armored buses, cars and ambulances the group has used to move 74,000 Ukrainians away from the front lines.