Today marks 1000 days of war, since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.
1000 days.
24,000 consecutive hours of missiles, drones, chemical warfare, rapes, murders, kidnappings, and needless loss of life. Hours upon hours hiding, running, sitting in the darkness.
24,000 consecutive hours. How can you even begin to imagine that if you aren’t in the middle of it? In the US, we get angry and upset if we have a short blackout due to a storm or transformer going out. But 24 THOUSAND hours? How can we comprehend and how is this even possible in today’s world?
This is not going to be a newsletter condemning any one side or taking a political stance and I encourage you to read until the end…there is hope! I simply want to remind you of the consequences of narrowing our world to only what affects us personally.
I want you to imagine what life would be like if you were born in Kyiv and not Kansas City or Odessa and not Orlando. What I want is for all of us to remember our shared humanity and recognize that closing our eyes or burying our head doesn’t remove the reality facing tens of thousands of people today…not just in Ukraine, but in too many places around the world.
When I woke up today, I knew the 1000-day mark was soon but had forgotten that it was today. I immediately began to think of how much has been lost in the last 1000 days. Not just lives, but homes, jobs, security, healthy minds, priceless family heirlooms, childhoods, and futures. I have worked in a lot of crises in my ministry, but I have never worked in a place where traumas keep happening day after day…without an end in sight.
Working in a natural disaster is very different. There’s a tragedy one day but then you begin to work towards recovering all that was lost. People pitch in and help, they make sure you are taken care of, and they support efforts to return to you what was lost, if possible. With a long war, there’s just not time to stop and recover. The hits keep coming, day after day, month after month, year after year. And, unfortunately, we as humans, lose our interest and move on to the next tragedy…not because this one is over, but because we often have short attention spans.
I am forever grateful to all the relief that was provided during the first year of the war. It helped so many people and showed Ukrainians that the world saw them…that we loved them and were here to support them. When year two started, at least ½ of the support stopped…fewer volunteers, fewer aid, less interest in knowing what was happening here…in short, compassion fatigue.
So many other things happened in 2023, and most people moved on. By early 2024, it was the two-year mark and most of the funding support for programs to help victims/survivors of the war, just ended. The local and national government was short of funds to continue food programs, housing of internally displaced persons, and stipends that allowed most to survive away from “home.” This didn’t mean that the need was also reduced…it went unchanged…unfortunately, resources became scarce.
And the human toll began to be seen more clearly. Less men between the ages of 24 and 55 were walking around. Those you did see, often were in the military or visiting from another country. Some were students or working in essential infrastructure jobs, but largely, men in this age group were absent. This also meant that construction and manual labor positions were drastically reduced. There just were not the workers to help.