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Real-life stories

Read how your help makes a big difference

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We received a call from the front line.

The situation was critical: the unit urgently needed a generator. Without electricity, there was no communication; without communication, there was no coordination; and without coordination, every night could cost lives.

There was no time. We just started acting.

And then something happened that is difficult to explain logically. People who had never seen these soldiers or heard their names responded immediately. Some transferred funds. Some helped with delivery. Some simply wrote: "Do what you need to do. We are with you."

A few days later, the generator was already working where yesterday there was darkness.

When we received the message from the front, it was difficult to hold back the tears. Not because of the equipment.
But because of the realisation that even in war there is room for genuine human warmth.
Your help is not just about things.
It is light in the darkness.
It is the certainty that you are not alone.
It is another chance to return home.

Thank you to everyone who acts instead of waiting.
Together, we do more than seems possible.

Together, we keep life going.

Sometimes miracles happen

Sometimes miracles happen when faith is almost gone...
Our military asked us for help, they needed a quad bike to transport the wounded from the battlefield. It was a cry of despair, because every minute there is someone's life.
And suddenly... two days later, I received a parcel. I opened it and saw the quad bike.
I stood there and cried. It was like a sign from above. It was as if the angels themselves had descended and touched our hearts through you.
You did the impossible.
Your help is not just equipment, it is a chance at life for our soldiers, it is faith that good is stronger than war.
Thank you from the bottom of my heart for this miracle. For listening, understanding and acting.
You are a part of the great miracle called "Life".

Oksana
Frivillig
Volunteer and war veteran: Serhii Kryvoshei

Humanitarian aid is not always about warehouses

Humanitarian aid is not always about warehouses, schedules, and safe routes. Sometimes it is about risk, discipline, and personal responsibility.

In November last year, our volunteer and war veteran Serhii Kryvoshei was delivering a Renault bus that had been donated to us free of charge by veterans of the Danish Armed Forces. The route was not to a logistics hub, it led directly toward the front line in the Kherson direction...

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Serhii was behind the wheel.

Around him were minefields. All roadsides were mined.
GPS did not work. Mobile internet was completely unavailable.
Any mistake could be fatal.

Inside the vehicle was a critical humanitarian cargo: food, medical supplies, and tools, items urgently needed by specific units on the front line...

During a short stop, Serhii discovered the body of a killed Russian occupier and an assault rifle with a large quantity of ammunition. Acting as an experienced soldier, he secured the weapon properly and continued the mission. The humanitarian cargo was delivered directly to the front-line positions as planned.

Only after returning safely to the rear did Serhii hand over the captured weapon to the police.

No drama. No heroics. Just professionalism and a clear understanding of what must be done.

These are the realities in which we operate.

This is how aid reaches those who are waiting for it.

Not through presentations or reports, but through mined roads, without communication, and without room for error.

That is why every vehicle, every shipment, and every donation carries real weight, and real impact.

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