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Lviv’s Provesin school, where 200 children participated, the program ended in 2006. During the last three years a total amount of $10,000 was paid out for the “Milk and Roll” Program. In 2005, humanitarian aid was given to the Lviv Oblast Children’s Specialty Clinical Hospital (Dr. Oleksander Myndiuk, director) in the form of replacement parts in the amount of $3,807 for the blood gas analyzer machine, which was donated to the hospital by the UNWLA in 1991. Sister Bernard, who travels to Ukraine to visit orphanages and handicapped children, brought funds in the amount of $2,515 to these orphanages. The Social Welfare fund received these donations from various donors specifically for orphanages. We sent $995 to seminarian Michael Petriv in Brazil for a complicated eye operation. We also donated $300 to Maksym Maksymyk, bom in 2005, for his complicated retina eye operation in Newark, New Jersey. The sum of $500 was given to Andrij Kravchuk, a young Ukrainian writer, who suffered during the Chomobyl disaster and is now trying to publish his book Let’s Remember Taras Shevchenko. The sum of $1,000 was sent to Olha Melnyk, a mother of a sick child from the Chomobyl zone. A donation was made in the sum of $2,000 to Oleksandra Sarabun from Temopil to help her get medical assistance for her son Ivan Berezuckyj, who suffers from malonymphona. We gave $300 to Olia Vivchar, a young bum victim from Ukraine. For the period from 2005 to 2007, we sent a total sum of $45,450 to the presidents of 28 Regional Branches of Soyuz Ukrainok of Ukraine and to the president of the Ukrainian Cultural Center “Batkivszczyna” in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, for distribution to “Babusi,” orphans, sick orphans, and orphanages. It is now 22 years after the Chomobyl tragedy, and the world is slowly forgetting about this great disaster from which millions of people suffered, especially children, who are the hope of Ukraine. Unfortunately, during the last three years, donations for the Chomobyl fund have not been forthcoming. Therefore, during this time we were able to help these victims with only $4,400. We hope that in the future our members will be more generous with their donations to this fund. We received a bequest from the estate of the late Marusia Beck designated for the Social Welfare Chomobyl Fund. The UNWLA Executive Board is now looking into a possibility of buying a small medically equipped “hospital bus” (with the name of the donor and the UNWLA emblem imprinted on it), which would travel through the Chomobyl zone providing medical assistance to the poor people living there. This proposal is now being looked over by the Ukrainian Ministry of Health, and we are anxiously awaiting their answer. The total amount of UNWLA Social Welfare aid given during the period from January 1, 2005 to December 31, 2005 was as follows: • Through the UNWLA Branches: $30,411-Ukraine $100 - Bosnia $200 - Poland $268 - Brazil Subtotal: $30,979 • Through the UNWLA Social Welfare: $37,318 Grand Total in 2005: $68,297 Total: $21,488 Grand Total in 2006: $55,206 The total amount of UNWLA Social Welfare aid given during the period from January 1, 2006 to December 31, 2006 was as follows: • Through the UNWLA Branches: $33,468 - Ukraine $150-Brazil $ 100 - Belarus Subtotal: $33,718 • Through the UNWLA Social Welfare Program: $20,488 - Ukraine $1,000-Brazil 140 XXVIII Конвенція СУА www.unwla.org
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