War Relief Updates - November 2, 2023

Thank you for your concern and for praying for Ukraine and the Ukrainian People

1. We are glad for an answer to prayer! Our Ukrainian church planters Eugene Buyko and Pavel Usach were granted permission to leave Ukraine temporarily and arrived in the United States this past Wednesday. Thank you for your prayers! Both men are greatly involved in our Ukrainian war-relief efforts and will be speaking in churches to share their firsthand accounts of how God is using these distributions to introduce recipients to the Gospel during this time of war.

2. In this week’s Ukraine war video update, Ukrainian missionary-pastor Igor Fomichov discusses how aid shipments from BIEM translate into changed lives in Ukraine. In it, he describes a poignant example from his own church. To view “The Story of One Box of Groceries,” please click the following link:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/groceries

3. As winter approaches in Ukraine, there are signs that Russia will once again attack the Ukrainian power grid as it did last winter. Apparently, the goal was to make Ukrainians suffer so badly from the cold that they would overthrow their own government for relief. However, generators were widely used to provide electricity. Many generators came from Western nations. BIEM participated in this effort as we provided over $200,000 for generators to churches that were vulnerable to these attacks. Now, with the cold weather approaching again, we welcome donations for generators in the months ahead.

4. After receiving a green light from military commanders on October 30, Sasha Petrenko (who ministers in the Goncharovsk, Ukraine, church) is taking a trip to the war front to deliver relief to soldiers from his area who are stationed near Donetsk and Zaporizhia. These are dangerous journeys, which are occasionally delayed due to military operations. Please pray for his safety and for those traveling with him. Pray, too, that this trip will go forward as planned.

5.  In our October 20 update, we mentioned that Ukraine has passed legislation that makes it much more difficult to send containers to Ukraine. That legislation goes into effect on December 1. One of the most-dreaded new requirements that had been announced was that receiving organizations must provide the passport information for everyone receiving aid. However, the broker in Ukraine who processes our containers has just received a notification concerning the new regulations. That particular requirement is missing from what they received. If this stipulation has been stricken, it would be great news since it would be unusual and invasive to expect needy citizens to show their passport in order to receive aid.

In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM