From Claims Conference’s Website:
“Claims Conference Mobilizes
in Ukraine”
Urgent Care and Support for
Holocaust Survivors For more than 20 years, the Claims Conference has
partnered with the Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) to work with the local
network of Hesed agencies in Ukraine and across the former Soviet Union to care
for the needs of thousands of Holocaust survivors.
(Holocaust survivor in hospital
bed visited by social service worker)
Today in Ukraine, there are over
10,000 survivors still living and nearly all these survivors are clients of the
Hesed network. The Claims Conference funding for services in Ukraine is over
$46 million and more than half of that goes for home care needs. 5,200
survivors in Ukraine receive home care on a regular basis and approximately 71
percent of these individuals are moderately disabled, which means they need
somewhere between 25 and 56 hours of home care assistance on a weekly basis.
However, there are 508 survivors in Ukraine who are fully homebound.
The largest Hesed is located in
Kyiv and is known as Bnei Azriel in honor and memory of the late Claims
Conference President Rabbi Israel Miller. There are 2,400 survivors being
served by this Hesed, half of whom receive home care. There are an additional
three Heseds in Odessa, Dnipro, and Kharkiv that serve between 1,000 and 1,500
survivors.
Eight Heseds serve between 200
and 550 survivors, including two Heseds, Donetsk and Luhansk, located in the
Donbas region, which has been a conflict zone since 2014. All the survivors in
Donetsk and Luhansk were called in the last week of February and given the
opportunity to be relocated temporarily either to Rostov in Russia or further
west in Ukraine. However, most of the survivors living there do not have any
family members and were not willing to leave their homes.
(Holocaust Survivor at home with
JDC social worker)
An additional eight Heseds serve
under 200 clients. However, although the Heseds are based in these 20 cities,
they are actually serving clients living in over 400 smaller cities and towns
across the entire region.
To prepare for the conflict, JDC
and Hesed took many preliminary steps. The Heseds were advanced funds so that
they could purchase water, food, medicine and first aid kits. The clients
themselves were advanced funds on their bank cards so they could pre-purchase
shelf stable food and any particular medications that they need. All Heseds
refreshed their emergency protocols so that staff could continue to work from
home and continue to provide services.
Each Hesed also mapped all their
home care clients, home care workers and volunteers to see who lived in walking
distance of clients – particularly those who are homebound or have no family,
so if unfortunately, there were to be a disruption to the transportation
networks or a curfew home care workers could walk to clients’ homes to ensure
they would receive care.
Before the weekend, Kyiv and
Kharkiv Heseds asked all the home care workers of the disabled clients to stay
with their clients in their homes over the weekend and to sleep there to ensure
they were cared for, and home care workers did it. For survivors who have
family members, the Heseds contacted their families in advance last week to
work out emergency plans and protocols.
(Holocaust Survivor at home with
JDC social worker)
Last week, the Heseds in the
western part of the country also all received deliveries of mattresses,
sleeping bags and blankets in case short term accommodations become necessary.
In the longer run JDC has made arrangements in Poland, Romania, Hungary and
Moldova for thousands of places should a large-scale evacuation become
necessary and possible. For areas like Kyiv, and Kharkiv, and Kherson, where
there is active fighting in the streets, it is not practical to try to relocate
elderly and homebound people on dangerous roads. JDC has activated a 24/7
emergency hotline that is proactively calling every single client, starting
with those who are homebound and those who have no family members. The hotline
also receives incoming calls from all the Hesed clients regarding any needs
that they have that the JDC can try to meet.
The Claims Conference got
permission from the German government to advance the second quarterly payment
for the Central and Eastern European Fund (CEEF) pension recipients – about
1,600 of whom live in Ukraine – so that instead of waiting until May, they
should receive funds in their account this week, which will sure become of
critical assistance to purchase food and medicine during the conflict.
Obviously, the situation is changing daily and even hourly, and the Claims
Conference, the JDC and the Heseds are working closely together to ensure
survivors are cared for and to help prevent humanitarian disaster.
https://www.claimscon.org/regions/fsu/ukraine/claims-conference-mobilizes-in-ukraine/
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