UKRAINE Appeal

Page 1

UKRAINE

AS THE WAR DRAGS ON... THROUGH THE YEARS:

acnmalta.org/ukraine

THE STORY OF ACN’S HELP IN UKRAINE From left to right- Marco Mencaglia (ACN Project Director of ACN for Eastern Europe), Magda Kaczmarek (ACN Head of Section for Eastern Europe), Archbishop Volodymyr Viytyshyn (Archbishop of the diocese Ivano-Frankivsk-UCR) and Sr. Karolina Mordaka (ACN Poland)

In 1953, “Ostpriesterhilfe”, as Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) was then called, received a request from Cardinal Tisserant, Secretary of the Vatican Congregation for the Eastern Churches, to support a seminary in Ukraine for Eastern Europeans who had emigrated. The Cardinal also asked for help in restoring the Greek Catholic Studite Order of Monks, that had been liquidated by the communists in 1946.

In January 1963, shortly after his release after 18 years of imprisonment and forced

SUBSISTENCE AID FOR NUNS: ACN has been supporting contemplative and active Nuns in Ukraine, providing them with subsistence aid.

TRAINING OF SEMINARIANS:

labour, the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Archbishop Josyf Slipyj met Fr Werenfried van Straaten, the founder of ACN, in Rome. Help for the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in exile was agreed upon and began in the same year. In 1989, ACN began a big Bible and prayer campaign, in which hundreds of religious books were sent to people in the country who found themselves cut off behind the Iron Curtain. On 30 March 1991, Cardinal Myroslav Lubachevsky, head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, returned from exile in Rome to Ukraine. This date marks the beginning of ACN’s help in the rebuilding of church structures on Ukrainian territory.

MASS STIPENDS:

Mass stipends are an indispensable form of support for Priests, especially in places where Priests draw no income from their poor communities, as in south-east Ukraine.

ACN has contributed towards the training of seminarians in 11 seminaries and 263 individual projects in Ukraine. The Foundation currently supports over 900 seminarians in the country.

Aid to the Church in Need www.acnmalta.org

From 1 April 1993, the Ukrainian programme of Radio Voskresinnya (Radio Resurrection) began its broadcasts on Ukrainian national radio. Up until this very day, this has been one of ACN’s key projects, which currently includes support for media in the Catholic Church of both rites principally on ZHYVE.TV and EWTN Radio or Radio Maria. The media make an enormous contribution to the interreligious dialogue in the country. Although the times of persecution were finally over, ACN continued to support Catholics in Ukraine. Main areas of ACN’s support in the last 10 years include:

RECONSTRUCTION: ACN has supported the building and renovation of 385 churches, 191 monasteries and 143 presbyteries.

Aid to the Church in Need (Malta), 35, Mdina Road, Attard, ATD 9038 Aid to the Church in Need is a Pontifical Foundation of the Catholic Church and registered in Malta Reg. No. LPF-212, as a Foundation regulated by the second schedule of the Civil Code Chapter (16) of the Laws of Malta. VO/2227

EMERGENCY HELP DURING THE COVID PANDEMIC:

ACN funded over 30 projects to alleviate the effects of Covid-19. This included medical costs for Nuns who fell ill from Covid-19, technical equipment for online broadcasting of Masses and Mass stipends to support Priests.

The Servants of the Immaculate Virgin Mary Sisters in Boryslav have established an aid center for displaced people at the parish, where every day they distribute clothes, food, medicines, provide spiritual and material support

As the military invasion of Ukraine sadly continues, Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) has launched the second phase of its emergency aid package to the country. Immediately after the start of the war, ACN mobilised a first package for the dioceses both in the West and in the East of Ukraine.

In this second phase, ACN wants to focus on providing direct support to the religious, priests and seminarians who have been hosting and caring for tens of thousands of displaced people in need of refuge and both physical and spiritual sustenance, as they try to make their way to the borders with other countries like Poland.

According to Magda Kaczmarek, project manager of ACN for Ukraine, this second phase of support for the Ukrainian Church will reinforce the emergency aid for monasteries and parishes sheltering displaced people. Part of the aid will go towards the purchase of vehicles to deliver relief food and medicines and to transport persons, as well as to buy generators to supply much-needed electricity. “The world has responded with generosity to the plight of the Ukrainian people. Many donations are reaching the bordering countries, but there is now a need for vehicles to transport the goods to those who need them in the country, often in locations that have been heavily damaged, or are still under threat,” she

If you wish to receive this leaflet by post please send us your contact details via SMS on 7999 9969

Church volunteers providing hot meals every day at the railway station in Odessa

explains. “ACN was one of the first organisations to pledge emergency support for Ukraine, a country where we have been funding projects for thirty years, that is since the end of the Cold War. It is important that the Ukrainians realise that even as this war drags on, their fellow believers around the world shall not forget them. ACN will continue to look for ways to help effectively, on the ground, through the local Church”.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.