I wrote these vignettes because I didn’t know what else to do.
I posted them on LinkedIn with links to The UN Refugee Agency’s Ukrainian donation page.
I published an AMA yesterday morning.
I planned to spend the day answering questions.
Then I turned on the news and couldn’t turn it off. I just had to sit there and watch:
The news played a video of a Ukrainian family in a bomb shelter, a dark, cold room. The adults were singing in the darkness. They were singing to keep their children calm.
And I recognized the song. I knew it.
Because I was born in Kyiv:
Those songs are my songs.Those words are my words. Those people are my people.
The shock is only now beginning to wear off.
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my Mama & Papa c. 1986 in beautiful Kyiv:
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Mom pulled out the photo album yesterday.
We sat at the table and flipped through the pages.
She stopped on a picture: “This was our last apartment before we left,” she said, “the last place we lived in Kyiv.”
“Which building?” I said.
“On the left.”
“This one?”
“Da, the yellow one,” she tapped on the picture, “this was our balcony… this was our window… this one, too.”
I studied the building. “I didn’t know that,” I said.
“Da, da,” she said, “you lived there.”
I took the picture out of its sleeve and looked at it.
Mom reached across the table for a napkin. She folded it in her hand. “I really hope nothing happens to it,” she said.
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Please, when you donate today, your compassionate gift will be matched by Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds — up to $1 million.
Double your impact to send lifesaving aid to Ukrainian families in need.
www.unrefugees.org/donateukraine