From Reuters:
“Elderly Japanese man opens free cafe in Ukraine's Kharkiv”
(Humanitarian volunteer
Fuminori Tsuchiko from Japan treats a girl with cookies outside of his
cafe in Kharkiv)
When Fuminori Tsuchiko arrived in the eastern Ukrainian city
of Kharkiv last year, he said he wanted to do anything he could to help people
following Russia's invasion. Moved by the plight of residents forced by Russian
shelling to shelter in subway stations, the 75-year-old Japanese national from
Tokyo decided to stay. For months, he said, he lived in a metro station and
worked as a volunteer distributing food in the subway.
He and a Ukrainian he met in the station have now opened a
free cafe in Kharkiv's Saltivka neighbourhood - mainly thanks to what he said
were donations made by Japanese people via social media. "June, July,
August, September, October, November, December - (for) seven months I stayed in
the metro, underground, sleeping or eating, and together (with) many, many
Ukrainian people," Tsuchiko said. 'FuMi Caffe' serves about 500 people a
day, he said.
Tsuchiko said he had been visiting Ukraine as a tourist in
February 2022, when the Japanese embassy urged him to leave as Russia prepared
to invade. He went to the Polish capital Warsaw but said he returned two months
later. One visitor to the cafe, Anna Tovstopyatova, said she had come to make a
donation. "It's great that there are so sincere people with an open heart
and soul, who sacrifice their life and time to help and give hope,"
Tovstopyatova said. Kharkiv held off Russian forces and Ukrainian forces then
pushed Russian troops back towards the border. Despite the retreat, Russian
attacks on the city have continued.
^ This is such a heartwarming story to read about. He could
have left and stayed safe, but instead he stays 20 miles from the Russian
Border helping others. ^
https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/elderly-japanese-man-opens-free-cafe-ukraines-kharkiv-2023-04-27/
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