PORTSMOUTH, Va. – Volunteers with a Virginia nonprofit group are working to provide relief to people fleeing their homes after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Portsmouth-based nonprofit Mercy Chefs has crews on the ground in Romania, near the Ukrainian border.
The group is working to support refugee shelters in the area. They were most recently in Kentucky, providing relief to those who lost everything after deadly tornadoes ripped through the state in December.
Gary LeBlanc, the founder and CEO of Mercy Chefs, shared what he has heard from the refugees leaving Ukraine who still have loved ones in the country.
“Tonight, they were speaking on the phone, saying, 'It is quiet tonight; we hope to get a good night's sleep.’ While they were on the phone, there was another bombing run, and you could hear the bombs in the background going off,” LeBlanc said Wednesday. “We could all hear it in the car. And it’s just very unnerving. Some of the conditions there are unspeakable."
While on the ground, Mercy Chefs volunteers will give out food kits, bottled water and hygiene items.
More than 40,000 people have crossed the Romanian border, and the nonprofit is exploring options to help refugees at other borders in Poland and Hungary.
Click here to learn more about Mercy Chefs' response efforts and click here if you'd like to help.