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My arms are open to welcome Ukrainian refugees …but can I do enough?

A warm welcome isn't sufficient to cope with the trauma of those who have fled a warzone, says Jonathan Shalit

April 7, 2022 08:42
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TOPSHOT - A pedestrian walks amid debris in a street following a shelling in Ukraine's second-biggest city of Kharkiv on March 7, 2022. - On the 12th day of Russia's invasion of Ukraine March 7, 2022, Russian forces pressed a siege of the key southern port of Mariupol and sought to increase pressure on the capital Kyiv. Kyiv remains under Ukrainian control as does Kharkiv in the east, with the overall Russian ground advance little changed over the last 24 hours in the face of fierce Ukrainian resistance. (Photo by Sergey BOBOK / AFP) (Photo by SERGEY BOBOK/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

The past two weeks have been the most challenging of my life.

A month ago, I received an email from a friend. “I need your help. A girl I know from Ukraine wants to get over here. Her and her girlfriend need a sponsor. If you can do one thing in this war, please help me to find her a job. If you can afford it maybe, you could consider sponsoring her yourself. I would hope that we as a community would be able to come together and help.” He also pointed out that the UK would be a better place for a LGBTQ couple than the country they’d fled to.

As the great-grandson of Eastern European refugees — my great grandmother was born in Ukraine — I needed little urging. On 18 March, Natalya, 25 and Yulia, 24, from Kyiv applied for their visas. Three days later they received their “permission to travel” letter. On 25 March they landed at Stansted. Knowing they would be tired we booked them into an airport hotel. So far, a seamless process.

On meeting Natalya and Yulia, I welcomed them with open arms and a huge hug. But I was not prepared for the lack of warmth and even coldness back. Not because they are anything but truly decent and remarkable people, but simply because they are living a nightmare. Returning the simple, sincere embrace of a strange benefactor, having fled your own country and home, cannot be easy for those who never could have imagined they would need such help.