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132 ХХ Х І I Конвенція СУА Volunteering at Dnipro Military Hospital Data from the annual reports and special projects supported by donors indicate that our members are extremely generous. Following are descriptions of funds and projects supported by UNWLA. War Victims Fund , established by Lida Bilous continues to support those affected by the war in eastern Ukraine. Our connections with hospitals in Dnipro, Zhytomyr, and Lviv have continued to bring medicine, supplies, psy chiatric hospital beds, computers to simplify evaluations and record progress of patients . Branches have adopted fami lies, aid has been sent to individual soldiers (for example, cost of a titanium plate for a soldier with a severe head injury), funding summer and winter camps for children aff ect ed by war. Accor ding to annual reports submitted by branches, $91,667 was collected for war - connected needs. We had been introduced to Summer and Winter Camps through Bishop Stepan Sus when he was the director of the Center for Military Chaplaincy of the Ukrainian Chaplaincy of the Ukra inian Catholic Archeparchy of Lviv, Ukraine. Rev, Taras Mychalchuk has assumed role of director. Children of soldiers, from the Donbas, and those disadvantaged or living in foster care from Lviv have been invited to participate in camps located in the Carp athian Mountains. Funds in the amounts of $10,000 per camp cycle have been assigned to this effort. Funding was not provided this past year due to the coronavirus pandemic. Recently, UNWLA donated $5,000 to the Anhelyky day program for preschoolers who hav e special needs that is directed by Rev. Roman Prokopecj at Orphan Center in Lviv. The Fund Babusi had been established in support of elderly women through Soyuz Ukrainok in Ukraine and the All - Ukrainian Society of Political and Repressed Persons. Women el igible for assistance need to meet criteria such as disability, raising grandchildren on their own or having no family support. Donation amounts vary, but on Easter, 2019, 521 women, depending on circumstances, each received between 400 - 650 hryvni. One wom an wrote, (translation) “...we are sincerely thankful to you, that you remembered us, that you remembered that in Ukraine there is a category of convicts who’ve been through hell on earth and lived to an elderly age. Perhaps God is keeping us on this earth as a symbol of battle. Thank you.” In 2020, Branch 98 collected $4,200 through a Christmas letter drive for the fund. Support for the UNWLA Orphanages program comes in the form of support by individual branches. Donations made are mostly in the form of pac kages of clothing, hygiene products, non - perishable goods, and small gifts, such as candy and toys. Branch 75 has a special relationship with an orphanage in Pokrovsk, Otchiy Dim, where they fulfilled the caretakers’ wish to receive a washing machine. Now, frequently, the branch supplies funds for winter jackets and games. UNWLA has supported several summer excursions to the Black Sea. Meeting with soldiers near the frontlines in Luhansk
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