Manitoba

How a century-old Canadian connection is bringing help, comfort to struggling Ukrainians

For more than a century, Mennonites in Canada have been providing aid and other help to Ukrainians, because of the close ties they have with the region. That work continues even now, during Russia's war on Ukraine, and those being helped say they are grateful.

Mennonites continue to fund programs for elderly, disadvantaged and youth in Ukraine

Dina Khvostenko, Lydia Utkina and Galina Petrovna, left to right, attend the day program at the Mennonite Family Centre in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine. There, they get two meals, help with personal hygiene, and socialization with other senior women. The free program is funded by Mennonites in Manitoba. (Courtesy Mennonite Family Centre)

Every day, a group of senior women gather at the Mennonite Family Centre in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, to share some meals, take care of personal hygiene needs, visit, sing, and have a Bible study.

"We are here as a family. … We eat here, we socialize and talk, and we receive support," said Galina Petrovna, 84, a retiree who has been attending the day program at the Mennonite Family Centre for eight years. She was speaking in Ukrainian and her words have been translated.

The centre was established as a registered charity in 2002 by the Mennonite Benevolent Society in Winnipeg, which continues to oversee and fund its programs.

"This is mainly elderly and disabled people who need material and emotional help," said Sergey Butyrin, the centre's assistant director.

"We try to create an atmosphere like a global family so that everyone can feel that they are loved and accepted here ... to remind of humanity and love."

The Mennonite Family Centre in Zaporizhzhya, Ukraine, runs programs for the elderly and for children with special needs. (Courtesy Louie Sawatzky)

In addition to the day program, the centre offers home care for bedridden clients, most of whom are widows.  

There's also daycare and education for children with special needs, a respite and seniors visitation program and a small medical clinic.

"We thank all those who take part in this because, thanks to your support, we can ensure a dignified existence and a very decent communication, nutrition and stay of those people who especially need attention, especially need help, especially in those very difficult times that our country is going through," said Irina Gnidenko, program co-ordinator for the respite centre.

A Ukrainian serviceman stands guard as emergency workers inspect a damaged bridge in Zaporizhzhia region. More than half of the settlements in the region are occupied by Russian forces. (Reuters)

Zaporizhzhia is a city in the southeast part of Ukraine. Many people fleeing the bombardment in Mariupol have sought refuge there; more than half of the settlements in the region are currently occupied by Russian forces.

"It is a pity that now a difficult and disturbing time has come, the war has begun. Sirens often howl, we hear explosions, we close the windows of our houses in the evenings so that no light can be seen," said Petrovna, who was born in Russia and still has family there. 

"It is scary to think how it was possible to create such a disaster — bomb cities, villages, kill women, children, old people, mock, rob, destroy in all possible ways."

Lydia Utkina echoes that sentiment. She also attends the day program and is grateful for the help the centre has provided, especially in the last two years.

"Life before the war, and now, is hard for us. The pension is small," she said.

"It was hard for us when there was a COVID epidemic, and people hardly worked, there was little money, but we were supported by the family centre.  They helped with groceries. When it was possible to come to the centre, we were fed breakfast and lunch."

Long history of Mennonites in Ukraine

Mennonites first arrived in Ukraine in 1788, at the invitation of Catherine the Great, the last and longest reigning empress of Russia. She offered them free land, religious and educational privileges and a military exemption.

The Mennonites established farming and manufacturing communities that became very successful.

Over the years, though, those religious and education privileges were challenged and repealed, causing the first migration from Russia to Canada in the 1870s, said Conrad Stoesz, archivist at the Mennonite Heritage Archives in Winnipeg.

Conrad Stoesz, archivist at the Mennonite Heritage Archives in Winnipeg, shows photos of lineups at food banks organized by the Mennonite Central Committee in Ukraine in the 1920s. (Trevor Brine/CBC News)

During the Russian revolution, Mennonites supported the White armies and became targets of the Red armies. In the Soviet years, Mennonites were marginalized and starved. Those who complained were disappeared. 

It resulted in another major emigration to Canada and other parts of the world. 

Mennonites in North America wanted to help those left behind, "so they administered food aid, soup kitchens, tractors, that type of thing to Mennonites but also to anyone who needed help," Stoesz said. He has several grainy black and white photos showing people lining up for food in scenes a century ago that are being echoed in Ukraine today.

It was the early work of what would become the Mennonite Central Committee, a relief and peace organization that continues to work in Ukraine and around the world.

Volunteers at Mennonite Central Committee Canada are filling five shipping containers with emergency supplies (relief buckets, blankets and canned meat). They will travel over-land through Europe into Ukraine, where partners and church organizations will distribute them. (Trevor Brine/CBC News)

Ukraine achieved independence from the former Soviet Union in 1991, which prompted Mennonites from Canada and the United States to return and visit as a way of discovering their roots.

"They came back talking about the plight of seniors and wondered whether the Mennonites in Manitoba or in North America generally couldn't do something to help the seniors in Ukraine. And that's how we got started," said Louie Sawatzky, the Winnipegger who acts as a liaison between the Mennonite Family Centre and the Mennonite Benevolent Society.

"We have had to suspend some of the programs during COVID and now again during the war. There have been strict curfews. ... but we've tried to return to the programs as soon as we can."

Every day, Louie Sawatzky of the Mennonite Benevolent Society in Winnipeg, checks in with staff at the Mennonite Family Centre in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, to see how they and their clients are doing. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

'Thank you to the people of your country'

Back at the centre, 83-year-old Dina Khvostenko reflects on what it was like to grow up in Ukraine during the Second World War — and how it compares to the current conflict.

"I remember how tanks of enemies stood behind our house. There were also soldiers behind the Dnieper River and there was a shootout," she said. 

"But such a horror that is happening now, I do not remember. ... This war is very cruel. They kill civilians, maim, rob, rape."

She, too, is grateful for the island of peace she has found at the centre.

"We feel good here, we eat, we pray, we sing, we eat," she said. "Thank you to the people of your country who help us, who support us, and thanks to the staff of the centre. May God send his mercy to them."

WATCH | Ukrainians grateful for support from Canadian Mennonite group:

'We are here as a family': Ukrainians grateful for centre founded by Canadian Mennonite group

2 years ago
Duration 2:49
Every day, people in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, gather at the Mennonite Family Centre, established as a registered charity by the Mennonite Benevolent Society in Winnipeg, to share meals, visit, sing, and have a Bible study.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karen Pauls

National reporter

Karen Pauls covers Manitoba stories for CBC national news. She has worked across Canada, U.S. and Europe, and in CBC bureaus in Washington, London and Berlin. Some of her awards include the New York Festivals for coverage of the Greyhound bus beheading and a Quirks & Quarks question show, and from the Radio Television Digital News Association for stories about asylum seekers, the Michif language, the Humboldt Broncos bus tragedy, live elections and royal wedding shows. In 2007, Karen received the Canadian Association of Journalist’s Dateline Hong Kong Fellowship and did a radio documentary on the 10th anniversary of the deadly avian flu outbreak. Story tips at karen.pauls@cbc.ca.