海角大神

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Ukraine as a model of civic giving

So many civilian aid groups sprang up after the invasion that Ukraine was even able to send help to earthquake-hit Turkey.

By the Monitor's Editorial Board

Despite a yearlong war with Russia 鈥 or perhaps because of it 鈥 Ukraine found the resources in February to aid another country in peril. It sent 87 specialists to Turkey to assist survivors of two massive earthquakes. The team, which included two search dogs, returned home this week.

鈥淒espite the fact that Ukraine itself is currently in the flames of war, we are ready to provide support to those in need,鈥 said Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor聽Klymenko. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 because the strong ones are always there to help and rescue.鈥

One of Ukraine鈥檚 strengths against Russia has been an army of civilian volunteers. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy calls them 鈥渢he most powerful part of Ukrainian civil society.鈥 Soon after the war began, more than 1,700 volunteer organizations sprang up, both big and small. They filled gaps left by the government, supplying soldiers with essential goods, feeding and housing the displaced, and aiding those released from Russian captivity.

鈥淚t was all held together by friends, neighbors, and social media,鈥 said Iryna Derevyanko, head of a union in Kherson, about local aid provided during the battle for that city.

Other countries have noticed this 鈥渨hole of society鈥 war effort on behalf of democratic values and territorial integrity.

In Europe, a report in February from a think tank in Belgium, MCC Brussels, made this recommendation to the European Union: 鈥淲hat the war in Ukraine has shown is that real security comes from the people 鈥 from being able to call on, motivate and involve society in matters of collective interest.鈥

In Washington, a few leading Ukrainian charities were invited in December to speak at a hearing before the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, an arm of Congress. 鈥淵our work is the highest manifestation of the values of the republican system and the virtues of a free society,鈥 said Rep. Joe Wilson, co-chairman of the hearing.

In Taiwan, which faces an invasion threat from China, President Tsai Ing-wen told The Atlantic that a country鈥檚 defense depends on the character of its people. 鈥淵ou need to have good leadership,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut more important is the people鈥檚 determination to defend themselves, and the Ukrainian people showed that.鈥

One of the main targets of the Russian military 鈥 much to its surprise 鈥 has been the support networks of Ukrainian volunteers. Ukrainians were even startled by their own cooperation and resilience. Hundreds of thousands of them, writes Mykhailo Dubynyansky in Ukrainska Pravda, have 鈥渄iscovered qualities in themselves that they had no idea about.鈥 In December, President Zelenskyy gave out the government鈥檚 first special awards for volunteers.

鈥淎nd every year we will celebrate volunteer projects,鈥 he said.

Once the war ends in its favor, Ukraine will never be the same. It has become a model of grassroots resilience, built on local people embracing shared ideals of a peace-loving democracy.