Urgent War Updates Email

War Relief Updates - December 8, 2023

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

1. Last week, we were glad to report that the new regulations for shipping humanitarian aid to Ukraine due to begin December 1 had been postponed for 6 months. This was great news because the Polish truck drivers’ strike had closed all border crossings for trucks. Therefore, we arranged to ship our container from the Polish port to Ukraine via rail. However, there is a backlog of such rail shipments since many shippers are jumping to that same strategy. (In case anyone is interested, here is an online article on this topic:  https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/ukraine-finds-ingenious-solution-to-polish-border-blockade/ar-AA1l9qAQ ) So, while our container sits at the port waiting for its turn, we are being charged $70-$100 per day after an initial 10-day grace period. Please pray that our container will get onto a railcar soon.

2. News reports in Ukraine state that conscription efforts will soon intensify. This is of great concern for all of us at BIEM since our churches need all the manpower they have to conduct their ministries and distribute war relief. Please pray that the effect on our churches as many Ukrainian men face conscription would be minimal.

3. In addition to ministering to the physical and spiritual needs of needy civilians in Ukraine’s war zone, BIEM personnel and volunteers likewise reach out to their military, the ones on the front lines. In this week’s video update, BIEM missionary Sasha Petrenko and others send you thanks for your War Relief donations! You can view this brief video here:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/thankyou

4. We are now launching an effort to raise $100,000 through our War Relief Fund to provide 1,000 Ukrainian soldiers with warm clothing and the Gospel for unsaved ones. Details will be in the cover letter for the Challenger newsletter now going out. Please pray God will work through this outreach.

5. This week we received several more pallets of donated aid for Ukraine—mostly good, used clothing, shoes, and housewares. This is in addition to the 8 pallets of medical supplies that we received earlier. We are thankful for all those who are delivering or shipping such donations. Some of these donated items end up in the Drug and Alcohol rehabilitation centers some of our churches operate. Therefore, household items, furniture, and gardening equipment are welcome and appreciated in these locations. Furthermore, sports equipment is always needed for youth ministries.

 In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President, BIEM

War Relief Updates - December 1, 2023

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

1. Praise God for a wonderful answer to prayer! As you know, we at BIEM were concerned about the new regulations governing humanitarian-aid shipments to Ukraine that were scheduled to go into effect on December 1. Despite our best efforts, due to the Polish truck drivers’ strike, it looked like our container would not arrive by December 1. However, this week the December 1 date has been extended by 6 months! Thank you for praying.

2. After leaving the U.S., Pasha Usach and Eugene Buyko have arrived back in Ukraine and rejoice to be reunited with their families and churches. This weekend, Vitaly and Alona Yurchenko, along with their 20-year-old son Nikita, arrive here at our headquarters to continue speaking in churches about how God is using our war-relief efforts to reach souls in Ukraine and to increase community appreciation of our churches there. Please pray that God will bless these December meetings.

3. On his 13th trip into the Donbas area, BIEM’s Vitaly Bilyak and Andrey Eliseev took both the Gospel and humanitarian aid to soldiers serving on the war front. Some of the recipients are men from their church who were conscripted to serve in the military. To see video footage that Vitaly and Andrey provided, please click the following link:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/donbas13

4. Igor Fomichov reports that V_____, a female staff member of the local military hospital in Desna, was moved by all that the church is doing to help wounded soldiers in the hospital and in distributing war-relief supplies in the community. This prompted her to visit the church, and she now attends regularly. Please pray for her salvation.

5. Also in the military city of Desna, the public-school administrator was likewise impressed by all that the church is doing for the military community during this time of war. So much so that he reached out to Igor and asked him to speak before the whole student body and to share what the church is doing. On November 29, Igor spoke to the entire school. He not only explained what the church is doing but why they are doing it, thus giving glory to God. This was a wonderful opportunity to present the Gospel, which is bound to produce fruit.

In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President, BIEM

War Relief Updates - November 22, 2023

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

1. This week, BIEM is posting our war-relief update and video update on Wednesday instead of Friday because of the Thanksgiving holiday. We want to take this opportunity to wish each of you a blessed Thanksgiving. One of the things that we as a ministry are thankful for is you, our dear friends. We are grateful for each of you who receives these updates and partners with us in these efforts to share the Gospel through war relief to suffering Ukrainians. God is blessing these distributions as you can see from the following touching update.

2. Yura, our church planter in Lviv, related an incident in which, because of War Relief funds BIEM provided, he was able to significantly help a victim of the war from Kharkiv, which was heavily bombed. His name is Ivan, and he survived the bombing of a civilian apartment complex that killed 220 people, including his wife and two children. Ivan was critically wounded and ended up in the military hospital in Lviv, where Yura often ministers to the patients. Because Ivan was openly considering suicide, someone gave him Yura’s contact information. When he phoned Yura, this led to Yura being able to regularly counsel and encourage him. Praise God, through this Ivan came to know the Lord! Yura also purchased the medicines and food needed. However, finding a place for Ivan to live was a huge problem that Yura’s church in Lviv began to earnestly pray about. God answered their prayers through a Christian brother in Odessa who offered Ivan a home to live in rent-free! Today Yura drove Ivan to the train station, where he will take a train to his new home. The Christian brother there and the church will be able to continue to minister to Ivan. Today, Ivan made this statement to Yura: “I never believed that I would ever consider commit suicide, but then God sent you and I was able to find God through you. I am so happy that God forgave me and gave me a new life through his son Jesus Christ. Though I have lost my family, God has given me a new family which are my wonderful brothers and sisters in Christ.”

3. BIEM’s Ukrainian church planters Pavel Usach and Eugene Buyko wanted to express their gratitude and other thoughts to American believers before departing back to Ukraine. You can hear and see that brief video message here:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/farewell

4. Please continue to pray about our humanitarian-aid container, which is due to arrive in the Polish port any day now. So far, the strike by Polish truck drivers continues to block border crossings into Ukraine. This quotation comes from the Kyiv Post:

As Polish protests blocking three major Poland-Ukraine border crossings stretch into their third week, negotiations to bring an end to the blockade have failed. Exhausted drivers are stuck in massive lines on both sides of the border, with expected waiting times reaching over one month at the Yahodyn – Dorohusk crossing, according to the electronic service, eCherha. Kyiv on Nov. 19 sent a humanitarian team to the border to provide food and water to truckers.

Furthermore, the arrangements we have made to avoid this blockade by shipping the container from Poland to Ukraine by rail instead of truck appear to offer little hope that the container shipped this way would arrive by December 1. Please pray.

5. One particularly encouraging video that Pasha Usach shared in the American churches he was able to visit is from Posad-Pokrovs’ke, a town in Kherson Oblast. On one of his aid-distribution trips to this town that was 80% destroyed, he noticed a heavily damaged church that had been abandoned. God burdened his heart about this, so he began asking people if they had contact information for any of its members, who had all evacuated to other areas of Ukraine. When he received contact information for two ladies who had been part of the church, he immediately noticed that they had evacuated to his own hometown. Soon Pasha paid them a visit, and he challenged them to return to their hometown as missionaries. This was indeed bold, since these ladies are in their 70s. Pasha told them the people there are very open to the Gospel and some have become believers through the distributions and the sharing of the Gospel that Pasha and his team performed. He told them their presence was needed there, not here where they were. He stated that he would help to re-establish the church if they would go back. They agreed to go! When they arrived, one of these ladies, upon seeing the destruction, collapsed! After two weeks of folks praying, she was able to walk again. So the two began services in her home. Even though these two ladies were limited to reading scripture, singing hymns, and sharing testimonies, before long more than 20 people were trying to attend but could not fit into their home. Pasha arranged for a tent to be put up beside the damaged church and for a church in a nearby town to send a preacher to hold the services regularly. Now 60+ people are attending and have the tent packed! Praise God! 

In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President, BIEM

War Relief Updates - November 17, 2023

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

1. Last week we mentioned an urgent prayer need concerning our container headed for Ukraine. It’s important for it to arrive in Ukraine by December 1 due to stricter regulations coming into effect that day, which will make it harder to receive humanitarian-aid status for such shipments. The prayer request involved the striking Polish truck drivers who have blocked truck border crossings. There is no sign of the strike ending and the lines are now thousands of trucks long. Therefore, we are trying to arrange to transport our container from Poland to Ukraine by rail. Please pray that this can be arranged.

2. Last week we mentioned that our church planter Vitaly Bilyak had completed his 13th trip to distribute aid and preach the Gospel to those living in the war zone. Accompanying Vitaly was Andrei Eliseev, who directs the church’s Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation ministry. To see and hear glimpses from that trip, please click the following link for the video, Donbas 13: Serving for Civilians:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/serving

3. As many of you know, each of our church plants in Ukraine has members and close relatives serving in Ukraine’s military. Many of them are in battle, and all of them will soon be facing freezing winter temperatures. Praise God, a friend of BIEM is especially burdened to help as many of these Ukrainian soldiers as possible with warm thermal underclothes and socks. He’s considering making a large donation for such a project if we can produce a realistic plan for procuring and distributing such items. Please pray that God would direct our thoughts concerning this important, potential project.

4. Igor Fomichov—who pastors the church on the military base in Desna, Ukraine— has recently returned home from a trip to the US, where he was sharing about BIEM’s war relief efforts with American congregations. He reports that more and more of his men are being called up for military service. One of his deacons and the director of their drug and alcohol rehabilitation center have both recently been called up. This reduction in manpower will slow down the church’s ministry of distributing war relief. Igor has been told that he may be next. Please pray that Igor would be spared military service as this would be a huge setback for that church’s overall ministry.

5. Yesterday a local charity sent us 8 pallets of medical supplies as humanitarian aid we can ship to Ukraine. We praise God for this huge blessing! Some friends have asked whether the new regulations will prevent us from continuing our war-relief shipments. Although continuing such aid will involve more work than in the past, we believe we will be able to continue shipping containers to Ukraine. Doing so may take a bit of time as our people adjust to the new regulations. However, we believe they will be able to adapt and continue despite the new, tighter regulations.

In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President, BIEM

War Relief Updates - November 10, 2023

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

1. BIEM’s Vitaly Bilyak recently completed his 13th war-relief trip to Ukraine’s war zone, where he and others distributed food and preached the Gospel to civilians, to active-duty servicemen, and to wounded ones in the Kurakhove hospital. On this particular trip he was accompanied by Andrei Eliseev, who directs the Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Ministry of the church. When they finished the civilian part of their journey and arrived at the military unit they were helping, Vitaly was presented with a military medal for his service!

2. Praise God, the trip to another area of the war front by Sasha Petrenko for which we requested prayer last week did take place. Now, Sasha and others are in the Zaporizhia area to deliver generators, winter coats, New Testaments, and other war-relief supplies. Please pray for spiritual fruit from all the Gospel seeds being planted in the soil of War Relief aid.

3. We have previously mentioned the need for prayer that our container heading to Ukraine arrive before December 1 due to new restrictions that go into effect on that day. The good news is that the projected date of this container’s arrival in the Polish port is November 23, which normally would provide plenty of time to get the container into Ukraine by December 31. Unfortunately, truckers across Poland have just gone on strike. As a result, the flow of trucks from Poland to Ukraine has come to a halt. Please pray that this strike will end in time to transport our container from Poland into Ukraine before December 1.

4. Last week we mentioned that our Ukrainian church planters Eugene Buyko and Pavel Usach have arrived in the U.S. and now are speaking in churches to share firsthand accounts of how God is using BIEM’s aid to introduce people to the Gospel during the war. Eugene and Pavel paused their activities long enough to record an update for the following video:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/containerconcerns

5. In the Kherson area of Ukraine, our people are considering holding an evangelistic winter camp for children whose parents were killed during the Russian occupation of their city. They request prayers for wisdom and divine guidance as they consider the logistics of holding such a camp. 

In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

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

War Relief Updates - October 27, 2023

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

1. Because of impending, adverse shipping changes we mentioned on October 20, BIEM rushed to send our next container of war relief to Ukraine as soon as possible. By God’s grace, we managed to secure a 40-foot-high cube container immediately, and we were blessed by a large group of volunteers who loaded the cargo in record time. On Tuesday, a driver delivered this container to the railroad depot, where it will be transported by rail to a seaport. Please pray with us that the vessel carrying this shipment will experience smooth sailing with no delays so it can reach the Polish port by November 23. That should enable us to truck it into Ukraine before December 1, when the stricter regulations go into effect.

2. Eugene Buyko and Pavel Usach are the next two Ukrainian church planters who are coming to visit churches in the United States. They have submitted all the forms required to apply for special permission to exit Ukraine temporarily for religious purposes as they plan to share how God is using war relief in Ukraine to reach souls. Please pray that their applications will be approved quickly so they can travel to the United States next week. Having Ukrainian pastors share firsthand accounts of our war relief efforts with American congregations greatly opens understanding and strengthens our financial and prayerful support.

3. In this week’s War Relief Video Update, Pastor Mykola of Sumy, Ukraine, shares about daily life in a city near the Russian border and the ways BIEM is assisting the church’s outreach to the community using gospels and humanitarian aid. Here’s the link:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/sumy

4. Sasha Petrenko, who pastors the church reaching the Goncharovsk military base, is preparing to transport aid to the war front in Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk. These are areas where soldiers from Goncharovsk are stationed. Therefore, Sasha has special access that enables him to deliver supplies needed by the soldiers connected with his church. They are involved in intense fighting, so these trips are dangerous. Praise God, among the items we managed to purchase are a large number of winter coats that he will deliver on this trip. These will certainly be a help as the cold of winter approaches.

5. With the war between Israel and Hamas dominating the news, friends of BIEM are asking how this affects our war-relief efforts for Ukraine. After all, the new war certainly shifts focus from Eastern Europe to the Middle East. No doubt, there will be some sort of effect, but we can’t predict what form that may take. (Many Ukrainians fear the new conflict will push Americans into donor fatigue, resulting in diminishing aid.) Nevertheless, we at BIEM will continue to apply what God supplies in the best ways we can. Meanwhile, we along with Ukrainian Christians and believers around the world will pray for Israel in these very difficult times.

In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - October 20, 2023

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

1. This week we have received a generous donation of over 10,000 cans of powdered baby formula. The best thing about this product is that it can be also used as a nutritional supplement for adults. This is a wonderful boost to our war-relief efforts as this will go a long way to help Ukrainian infants, children, and adults during this time of war when many are lacking the nutrition they need.

2. Ukraine has passed legislation that makes it much more difficult to send containers to Ukraine. This goes into effect on December 1. Under the new regulations, a total of 20 steps will be required to import humanitarian supplies. All the steps must be completed within 30 days, which is not realistic. Another new requirement required after December 1 is that organizations providing humanitarian aid will be required to provide the passport information of every recipient! Remarkably, Ukraine’s Ministry of Social Policy, which is responsible for this new legislation, claims that the new rules are designed to make matters simpler! Many organizations across Ukraine are speaking out against these changes. Please pray that the Ukrainian government will rescind or at least lessen these new regulations.

3.  We are praising God for a group of volunteers from Heritage Baptist Church in the Chicago area who came to our headquarters with a load of clothing donations as well as wheelchairs, walkers, crutches, and other medical supplies. The group spent the whole day sorting and packing a large volume of donated items that had not yet been processed. In fact, they managed to process everything we had available! This gift of their energy turned out to be quite timely: shortly after they left we learned we needed to load a container immediately due to the circumstances mentioned above. Having all these goods packed and ready to go enables us to put them aboard the container this weekend. This would not have been possible without the timely visit of these folks from Heritage Baptist. Praise the Lord!

4. In the town of Lubyanka, Ukraine, Russian occupiers took over the church building and did much damage to it. But, as the pastor in the following video explains, God is still in control. Here’s the link:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/incontrol

5. Thanks to a generous donation from a local supporter and friend of BIEM, Igor Fomichov and Vitaly Bilyak were each able to go on a shopping spree to purchase warm winter clothing needed by the soldiers connected with their churches. This opportunity came in time to add the warm clothing to the container being loaded this weekend. Once again, thanks to God’s timing, these items should reach their destinations before the coldest part of the upcoming winter.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - October 13, 2023

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

1. Last week we requested prayer that Igor Fomichov be allowed to leave Ukraine temporarily. Even though as a pastor he had been granted official permission to do so, the final decision is up to the border guards, who at first denied him on his last trip but relented after intervention by the Mayor of Desna, where Igor serves on the city council. We are glad to report that Igor was permitted to leave Ukraine last Friday and was able to participate in a missions conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota, his first stop. Thank you for praying.

2. Our folks in Ukraine have told us that, since the war started, 495 Baptist churches in Ukraine have closed. This is mostly due to pastors leaving for the West. On the other hand, the churches where pastors choose to stay have gained many new people as they have been providing war relief to local residents. Praise God!

3. This week’s video update is titled “Thrilled at God’s Blessings.” It focuses on our newer missionaries—the Koops—and the Druzhba area, where BIEM has distributed much war relief. To view it, please click the following link:

https://vimeo.com/874215448

4. Forum 18 reports the following from Russian-occupied Ukraine:

“Russian occupation forces have closed and seized more churches, the latest known being an Orthodox Church of Ukraine church in Basan and a Baptist Union church in Zaporizhzia Region, and the Catholic Church in Skadovsk in Kherson Region. Occupation forces broke the Catholic church’s windows and door during a raid, claiming they were looking for explosives and drugs. Artyom Sharlay of the Russian occupiers’ Religious Organisations Department claimed to Forum 18 that “law-abiding” religious communities “face no restrictions, but those that break the law are banned.”

5. In a recent update and in our October BIEM’s of Light Prayer & Praise sheet, we mentioned the new church in Nizhylovychi, which was started as the result of our war-relief efforts. That part of the Hostomel area had been occupied by Russian forces, who dragged away everything of value. This church has been meeting in a leaky, old tent while renovations are taking place in the building we purchased for it. The priority is installing heat and flooring. A major storm hit there last week, and it demolished the old tent. Now, the job of completing the heat and flooring has become urgent. Please pray that enough progress can be made to meet in this building since the tent is no longer an option. Funds to help with this project are needed as well.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - October 6, 2023

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

1. Recently, we wrote about the need to supply tourniquets to families in our Ukrainian churches who have loved ones in battle. Praise God for Operation Renewed Hope, which has provided funds for us to purchase almost 250 high-quality, American-made tourniquets that Ukrainian military medics praise highly. We were able to distribute the first portion of these during our travels in Ukraine these past two weeks. The rest will soon follow. Please continue to pray for this continuing need.

2. We are thankful for everyone who prayed for the safety of our students and teachers during our Fall seminary session in Kyiv. That session has now concluded. During this period, Russia targeted Kyiv with 33 Shahed suicide drones and one rocket. Praise God, these threats did not affect our classes, and this number was far fewer than in previous weeks. Even better, they resulted in no reported casualties.

3. Often, money alone cannot meet the needs of wartime victims in Ukraine. Here, BIEM missionary Pasha Usach shares how he and other believers traveled to a devastated area to apply their time and muscles to help people who could not help themselves, particularly those in need of heating this winter. May God receive praise for their actions! To view this short video, please click the following link:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/helpinghands

4. Praise God, yesterday Igor Fomichov received the official permission he needed to leave Ukraine to travel to the US for the meetings we have scheduled over the next several weeks. This is an answer to a prayer request we shared previously. However, prayer is still needed since the border guards have the final say and can deny an exit even though official government permission has been granted. This almost happened the last time Igor came to the United States, and only through the late night (2:30 am) intervention of the mayor was Igor permitted to exit.

5. Our last stop on this trip to Ukraine was in Lviv, a large city in far Western Ukraine. There, Pastor Yura and the congregation are earnestly praying for a family in the church whose son Alexander has been missing in action for more than 20 days. Despite many inquiries to the military, the family has yet to learn whether he has been killed, wounded, or taken prisoner. Unfortunately, this is not an uncommon situation for families in Ukraine these days. Please pray for Alexander, his family, and this church. Pray also for Pastor Yura as he ministers to this family.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - September 29, 2023

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

1. BIEM Board member Kevin Gaugler and I are now in Ukraine, where we are making stops in multiple areas where BIEM has planted churches. We are looking forward to a baptism this Sunday in Bilogorodka, where brother Eugene Buyko is the church planter. One of the churches where brother Eugene has delivered war relief aid from BIEM is in Lubyanka, which is in the Hostomel area, which was previously occupied by Russians and was the site of many atrocities. When the pastor there heard Eugene was planning a baptism for this Sunday, he telephoned. Like most Ukrainian churches, the Lubyanka church baptizes in nearby rivers and lakes. However, the pastor explained that the shores around the rivers and lakes near his church are plagued with land mines. Because he didn’t want to risk having anyone blown up by attending a baptism, he asked if his congregation could attend and baptize their converts in Bilogorodka’s pool, too. Eugene gladly agreed! So, we look forward to great fellowship with a congregation that has endured much suffering yet remains faithful and continues to win souls.

2. Back on January 6, we wrote about a refugee family who showed up in brother Yura’s church in Lviv after escaping from an occupied area. They told the heartbreaking story of their 27-year-old daughter who had served in the Ukrainian military. Somehow the Russian military killed her. After this family received notification from the Russian military that they could come and retrieve her body, the brokenhearted family arrived only to be shocked and horrified: her body had been cut into several pieces. We visited Pastor Yura yesterday, and he gave us an update. In the months since this grieving family arrived in Lviv, the local church has been reaching out to them with love and compassion. As a result, the father, mother, and most of the children have been saved, baptized, and become an integral part of this church. Praise God!

3. After visiting some supporting churches in the U.S., church-planter Vitaly Bilyak paused to share his gratitude and some parting words with you friends in America. Please watch this brief video here:

https://vimeo.com/869314876

4. Tomorrow we are looking forward to visiting the new church in Nizhylovychi. This is the church that began through our war-relief distributions in that area. Since the congregation’s humble beginnings, there has been exciting progress as the Lord supplied funds to purchase a simple, old house to serve as a church building even though it needed repair work. Since its purchase, we have been able to install a badly needed concrete floor. More recently, additional funds have arrived for a new well, so soon they will have clean, running water. When the church planter showed us photos of some elderly new converts struggling to read their Bibles with little magnifying glasses, we purchased nice, large magnifying glasses for them. We look forward to handing out these new magnifying glasses tomorrow.

5. Here at the Seminary in Kyiv, we are thrilled at the attendance of 32 students for the Fall session. We thank God for such a turnout during this time of war in Ukraine. Because of the war, our students from Donetsk, Lugansk, and other occupied regions cannot come. Also prevented from coming are the students from Belarus. Therefore, to still have 32 students is more than we expected. Praise God! For those students who were able to attend this week, besides learning much from the classes taught, the time together and wonderful fellowship they have been able to enjoy provide their own form of war relief. Of these 32, 8 have newly enrolled just this semester. Once again, we praise God!

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - September 22, 2023

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

1. One of the important features of our war-relief efforts is to include Bible distribution along with humanitarian aid. These Bible and New Testaments are being gladly received. Our workers say they have not seen such a hunger for God’s Word since when the Iron Curtain suddenly fell. Likewise, today in Ukraine there is an openness to receive God’s Word that most likely is one effect of the war since people do tend to turn to Heaven during difficult times. Sadly, plenty of people react to the war in the opposite way: instead of turning to God, they blame God for allowing such a calamity to happen. Many of the New Testaments our people are distributing to soldiers have a camouflage cover, which certainly blends with their surroundings. What is within these special covers is the greatest power we know—the wonderful and precious words of our Lord.

2.This week we are concluding meetings we have scheduled in churches with Vitaly Bilyak, who has made 12 trips to the warfront delivering aid and sharing the Gospel with civilians and with the military. He receives special access to some divisions since men from his church serve in them. These trips to the warfront are dangerous, as evidenced by the artillery fire you can hear in the background of some of his videos we have been showing in churches. That sound of artillery prompted one believer to ask, “Vitaly, was there a moment on these trips when you felt in serious danger?” “Yes,” replied Vitaly, “several times.” When asked for an example, Vitaly recounted a time when he and his son-in-law Sergiy traveled to Bakhmut. After two long days of distributing aid and sharing the Gospel, Vitaly and Sergiy drove with the local pastor to retrieve several cans of gasoline that were stored in the church building. When they arrived, Vitaly noticed the building was well shot up. That fact made him wonder exactly how close they were to the fighting. He didn’t have to wonder long—as they were loading canisters of gasoline, a Ukrainian tank pulled up right in front of the church and began firing at a nearby Russian position. After numerous rounds, the tank sped away. Vitaly realized why the tank left in a rush. Obviously, the crew expected return fire! Vitaly said, “I think we have enough gas for now. Let’s go!”

3. In this week’s video update, BIEM's Sasha Petrenko is joined by the local mayor, who sincerely thanks BIEM for all the humanitarian aid you friends are providing for Ukraine during this time of war and special needs.

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/physical-spiritualaid

4. We have just heard from a church group in the Chicago area that plans to come soon to deliver aid and supplies for shipment to Ukraine. Another blessing—they plan to spend time helping to sort and pack much of the donated items we have accumulated in our warehouse. Yet a third blessing—they say they have collected 5 wheelchairs, which they will bring. Praise God! Wheelchairs are among the most requested items in Ukraine these days.

5. Next week Sam Slobodian and BIEM board member Pastor Kevin Gaugler will be in Ukraine for our Fall Seminary session and to survey our war-relief distribution. Please pray for safety and God’s protection since Russia continues its bomb, missile, and drone attacks all over Ukraine. Please pray for the safety of the seminary students and staff as well.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - September 15, 2023

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

1. Anton, a member of the church with an outreach to the military base in Goncharovsk, Ukraine (near the Belarusian border), shared an interesting story. Last Sunday, he wore a tee shirt that proclaims, “My God Is Real.” He was standing at a bus stop when a newly recruited soldier approached him. After reading Anton’s tee shirt, the soldier said, “You must be a believer.” Anton replied that he is. Next, the soldier (named Sergei) said, “I am too. Can you tell me where I can find a Bible-preaching church around here?” Anton rejoiced. “Come with me,” he said. “I’m going there now!” Praise God for a church established in this needy place where soldiers being deployed to the war can receive strength from God’s Word and fellowship with believers! (We’ll post a photo of Anton with Sergei on BIEM’s Facebook page.)

2. Thank you for praying for Sasha Petrenko’s delayed trip to the war front to deliver relief supplies for civilians and soldiers in Zaporizhia. Sasha reports that this effort took place and that God protected the 4 men and 2 vehicles who undertook this dangerous journey. Along with much food, this delivery included tools, chainsaws, insulated canisters for transporting food, a vehicle for transporting wounded soldiers, and other practical items.

3. On the trip mentioned in #2 above, Sasha had many opportunities to share Christ and pray with soldiers who are involved in the intensive counteroffensive taking place. The New Testaments he distributed to these soldiers feature camouflage covers, which was a nice touch for these men. A young soldier named Artyom was especially glad to see Sasha. Artyom had been reached through the church’s camping and youth ministries. Now he says that everything he had heard from the Word of God and hidden in his heart has become very real and precious during his deployment. Praise God!

4. In this week’s video update, several BIEM missionaries in Ukraine and their volunteers thank American believers for the latest shipment of aid received and give glimpses of the contents as they unload it. You can view that brief video at this link:

https://vimeo.com/864861254

5. As many of you know, even though men between the ages of 18 and 60 are not allowed to leave Ukraine, the Ukrainian government has made an exception for pastors who are invited to the West for religious purposes. So far, we have been able to obtain that special approval for several of our church planters. Therefore, we have had a steady stream of Ukrainian church planters coming to the United States to speak in churches. They have been a huge blessing to American believers, who are glad to receive firsthand reports of how God is using our war-relief efforts to reach souls. Yesterday we began the application process for such exemptions for church planters we hope to have with us next month. However, it turns out that the requirements have changed and the paperwork is now more complicated. Please pray that the two applications we are submitting under the new requirements will be accepted.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - September 8, 2023

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

1. Last week we requested prayer regarding Sasha Petrenko’s plans to deliver a load of items to the embattled area of Zaporizhia where many soldiers from the Goncharovsk military base (where Sasha lives and ministers) are stationed. The commander had called and asked that Sasha and his team postpone the trip because heavy fighting would endanger the convoy. This trip is on again; Sasha hopes to leave tomorrow. Please pray for him and the others making this trip, that God would keep them all safe.

2. In the military city of Desna, Igor Fomichov reports that they are continuing to see fruit from their local war-relief distributions. Some recipients end up visiting the church and trusting Christ. The church is now planning another baptism. One of the new converts is a lady who had evacuated to a nearby village with her invalid husband. Igor took them supplies and groceries. They were astounded that anyone would do such a thing and expressed openness to hear the Gospel. Praise God, the wife received Christ, is now regularly attending the services, and is one of those preparing for baptism!

3. In a recent interview with The Associated Press, the head of the International Rescue Committee observed that the amount of humanitarian aid given for Ukraine is far below last year’s giving. BIEM has noticed the same truth. When Russia first invaded Ukraine, people worldwide were outraged and gave to aid the victims of shelling, missiles, tank fire, etc. But in 2023, people in the West are accustomed to knowing part of Ukraine is occupied, that warfare continues there. The shock and outrage have largely worn off. In an interview, Sergiy Shaptala—pastor of Ukraine’s largest Baptist church—addresses the issue of declining aid even as the needs are mounting. You can see that short video here:

https://vimeo.com/861365666

4. It has been reported that Ukraine’s President Zelensky is considering signing into law a measure that would reduce the age of those exempt from being drafted due to being enrolled in university studies down to 30. (Currently, citizens of any age enrolled in university classes are exempt from military service.) Such a change would certainly affect some members of our churches in Ukraine, so there is a great deal of concern about this possibility.

5. With summer camps concluded, our camps statistics for this year are in and—praise God—we are glad to report that our Ukrainian personnel conducted over 50 different camps with a total of 3,712 campers attending. Many of these campers were war refugees. A good number of churches conducted more than one camp, holding various camps for different age groups. They also organized a good number of camps in nearby villages. We praise God that, even during this time of war, BIEM had opportunities to conduct so many camps where many youths accepted Christ and made many other life-changing decisions.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - September 1, 2023

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

1. One of our partnering churches in Ukraine is on the outskirts of Vinnitsa, a large city where a group of 800 refugees from Kherson recently arrived, each with just the clothes they were wearing and a small bag. These people are victims of the flooding caused by the Russians exploding the Nova Kakhovka Dam. BIEM personnel were able to drive a large vehicle full of much-needed aid to that church. These items will help that congregation minister to these people who have lost nearly all their possessions.

2. Polonne in Khelnitskiy region is another large city that has received many refugees. This week, BIEM church planter Eugene Buyko was able to take a large load of humanitarian aid to a local church ministering to this group of refugees. The mayor there presented Eugene with an official letter of commendation and appreciation to BIEM for the help they are receiving. In fact, BIEM has received dozens of such official expressions of gratitude from local authorities in the areas where we have provided war relief. And even though our ministry’s name is the one on these letters of deep gratitude, all of you who are giving are the ones who deserve the real thanks. May our Heavenly Father reward you richly for these donations in Christ’s name to bless people going through extreme hardships!

3. One of the most common questions we receive at BIEM is “What are the most pressing needs in Ukraine right now?” Of course, contributions to BIEM’s War Relief Fund are always needed and give us much flexibility in the kinds of aid we can supply for churches to minister to their countrymen. But in this week’s video, Sam Slobodian and Ukrainian missionary-pastor Vitaly Bilyak discuss specific non-monetary needs that many of you friends can provide with unused items in your cabinets, closets, or basements. To view this brief video, please click the following link:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/ukraineneeds

4. Sasha Petrenko, the BIEM church planter on the military base in Goncharovsk, was scheduled to deliver relief to the Goncharovsk brigade that is battling in Zaporizhzhia. However, the commander there called and told him to postpone this delivery because the battle was so intense that they could come under fire. Sasha and his team hope to make this trip next week instead. Please pray that Sasha and those who are part of the group delivering this aid will be able to do so, and please pray for their safety as well.

5. Although it’s not exactly a war-relief item, yesterday we were thrilled to receive a beautiful wooden pulpit from a church in Indianapolis. When that congregation remodeled their interior, their pulpit no longer matched—so they donated it to us. As with previous such gifts, this pulpit will be shipped to Ukraine with our next load of humanitarian aid. There, it will be used to preach God’s Word and to glorify Him. And if any of you have access to good, solid pulpits (or other church furniture, such as chairs and folding tables) that aren’t being used, we would be thrilled to accept them for Eastern Europe!

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - August 25, 2023

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

1. After a Russian missile struck an apartment complex in Lviv, Ukraine, BIEM’s Yura Levtseniuk and his church were among those who rendered aid to victims in various ways. Thanks to Yura’s medical training, he has an open door to make bandages and to assist in treating festering wounds at the local hospital. In turn, such assistance provides him with opportunities to share about Christ. Yura says, “Thank you very much for the [financial] help that was provided. Thanks to you, we were able to help people who suffered because of the missile strike. We helped them to purchase [repair] materials and transported them as needed. One woman promised to come to our services, saying that she used to visit an evangelical church.” In all these situations, believers reflect the love of God, and gifts to BIEM’s War Relief Fund play a key role.

2. The Ukrainian government continues to allow pastors to leave Ukraine for short periods of time for religious purposes. Speaking in churches and raising awareness of the war qualifies our missionary-pastors for this exception and helps to raise funds for our war-relief efforts. This weekend, we begin meetings with Vitaly Bilyak, who has made numerous war-relief-distribution trips to the war front. We will be in churches in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Indiana, Pennsylvania, and Ohio over the next several weeks. Please pray for these meetings as Vitaly seeks to minister to hearts from God’s Word and to update listeners on the current situation overseas.

3. This week’s war-relief video comes from Desna, Ukraine, where Igor and Aleksandra Fomichov talk about ways their local church has been able to minister to the physical needs of people in their community, including medicines for locals with limited income and tourniquets to save the lives of those injured due to the war. You can see the video here:

https://vimeo.com/856911786?share=copy

4. At this point in August, our final Christian camps for children and teens in Eastern Europe are winding down. We do not yet have statistics to share; however, we do know that many refugee children and youth attended these camps. For them, it was a chance to eat nourishing food and forget about the war while having fun, playing games, and fellowshipping. For our camp staffers, these camps provided a wonderful tool for uplifting these young people with God’s Word and explaining God’s way of salvation. Although some people expressed surprise that churches would even consider holding camps during a time of war, many parents of children who returned home refreshed and happy expressed deep appreciation to those who ministered to their children in these camps. Thank you to each of you who donated to make them possible. Together, your combined gifts met the full amount of our goal for the camp ministries.

5. On July 7, we told about a Ukrainian woman, Nastya, who was severely wounded in battle while serving in the Ukrainian military. Thanks to a tourniquet supplied via BIEM, her life and even her arm were saved. Amazingly, this week, Nastya felt strong enough to reenlist. However, Nastya had no suitable footgear for military duty, and her nation’s ability to supply such needs has worn thin. Willing to help, BIEM purchased a pair of boots for her.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - August 18, 2023

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

1. A good amount of medical supplies and equipment is always included in our container shipments of aid to Ukraine. This is possible because of generous supplies of items we receive from donors who contribute everything from stethoscopes to adult diapers. Occasionally we receive a hospital bed. These are huge blessings to people in Ukraine. When possible, aid items get recycled over and over again in Ukraine as our folks get these to families in need who, when they are finished using, are glad to pass an item on to another family. Just recently, folks in Minnesota made available an extra nice, almost-new hospital bed that originally cost $7,000. Now, because of war casualties among military and civilians alike, such items are needed more than ever before. Praise God for this wonderful provision!

Sometimes people ask us, “What kind of equipment is needed most?” Our answer is probably wheelchairs. This is a continuing need in Ukraine. So if you have access to a new or used wheelchair, please consider donating it for Ukraine. Along with those, crutches, canes, and aluminum walkers are always needed. It has been a blessing to receive many of these, which we are always glad to ship to Ukraine. (One time, a visitor stopped by and noticed a large number of walkers, crutches, and canes that had been dropped off to our warehouse in a disorderly fashion. A little embarrassed at the jumble, I jokingly told the visitor, “Sorry about the mess; this always happens after we have a healing service!”)

3. This week’s video concerning war relief focuses on the Christian Rehabilitation Center near Ternopil, Ukraine. That ministry (operated by the local church) has freed many men from addictions to alcohol and drugs. In turn, those men are assisting in BIEM’s war relief efforts. To learn more, please click the following link:

https://vimeo.com/855849147?share=copy

4. As many of you know, the Slobodians have recently returned from a trip to Ukraine, where they helped in summer camps. Each camp included a significant number of refugees. Following is a link to a video about this trip that will be BIEM’s monthly video for August. If you do not receive these monthly presentations, you can subscribe on our website. In the meantime, you can view this video, which has a war relief element to it and ends with a sample of what it is like to be in Ukraine these days:

https://vimeo.com/855809988?share=copy

5. On the way to visit BIEM missionaries in the Republic of Georgia earlier this week, Sam Slobodian was able to make a stop in Turkey to visit a special orphanage that we have helped with War Relief funds. This orphanage houses nearly 600 Ukrainian children & youth that have been evacuated to Turkey. Many of them are war orphans, children of parents who have been killed in the war. It was a blessing to see how these children are being cared for and to see a location where BIEM is practicing James 1:27: “Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world.”

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - August 11, 2023

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

1. As the war in Ukraine continues, American support for Ukraine remains significant. The fact that most Americans are in favor of aid for Ukraine certainly helps our own war-relief efforts. From the beginning, some have predicted this high level of support would not continue indefinitely and that at a certain point “war weariness” would set in among the American people. This prediction is hard to disagree with, although when such a change might occur is an open question. On August 4, CNN evidently tried to sway the public into believing this has already happened by publishing a misleading headline that stated, “Majority of Americans oppose more US aid for Ukraine in war with Russia.”

Many have refuted this disinformation published by CNN. For example, Wednesday’s issue of the Kyiv Post stated this about the CNN statement: “That was not accurate. Its poll results were that 56 percent were concerned (not opposed) that more aid to the war would threaten US national security.” The Kyiv Post went on to say that American support for Ukraine continues to be strong and that the CNN statistics show the reverse of what their misleading headline seems to indicate since in February of 2022 72% of Americans polled were concerned that the war would threaten US national security. Therefore, fewer Americans are concerned about this issue now than before. You can find this information in the August 10 issue of the Kyiv Post under the title, “OPINION: Ukraine Support Holds.” Nevertheless, while we hope it does not happen, it is realistic to expect that eventually American support will decline.

2. Last week the Kellers, BIEM missionaries to Ukraine, concluded their time of staying at our Indianapolis headquarters while they reported to supporting churches in Indiana. Previously, we mentioned how they greatly helped our war-relief efforts by spending many hours sorting and packing donated items for shipment to Ukraine. This is just one of several ways this family has been involved in war relief; another is by overseeing efforts by the churches they started in Ukraine. With the help of Zoom, they stay in close contact with these groups. For example, the Kellers spearheaded a project to raise a considerable amount of funds for generators, which they distributed through these contacts in Ukraine. In addition, Dana, the oldest of their 3 daughters, spent the summer working in special summer camps for children and youth orphaned because of the war. Dana spent the last 2 weeks working in similar camps in Turkey, where there are hundreds of Ukrainian orphans.

3. BIEM war-relief efforts played a key role in the establishment of a new church in the Druzhba area (means “friendship”) of Ternopil, Ukraine. Sam and Amy were able to visit that location and spend time with our new Ukrainian national missionaries, Sergiy and Karina Koop. This visit was special since the Slobodians were able to meet the Koops’ 6-week-old baby daughter, Karolina. The following link contains a video update about the Koops’ ministry:

https://vimeo.com/853457038

4. Sam and Amy Slobodian also report that during their time in Ukraine they were able to participate in two baptisms. One baptism took place in Ternopil, and the other in Smolin, a town near the Goncharovsk military base. In both locations those baptisms included converts who were reached through our war-relief distribution efforts. The baptism in Smolin was attended by the mayor of Smolin and his wife. Please pray that the Gospel they heard will work in their hearts.

5. From the Slobodians who just returned from Ukraine: “Dear Friends, we want to sincerely thank each of you who prayed for our safety and the safety of camp workers, campers, and the personnel distributing war relief during our trip. Your prayers were especially needed during the time because it was then that Russia stepped up their attacks on Ukraine in response to successful Ukrainian drone operations. In one week alone, Russia used 65 missiles and 178 attack drones, including 87 very dangerous “Shaheds.” Although Ukraine has become quite good at shooting these down, a few still get through. Nevertheless, none of us were hurt, although we sometimes heard sirens and lost electricity at times, once for 13 hours. Praise God, the camps were unaffected, and the Lord worked mightily in the hearts of the hundreds of children and youth who joyfully attended. God also protected us from ourselves. While returning to the Kyiv area from Nizhylovychi (a formerly Russian-occupied area between Bucha and Hostomel, where a new church has been planted through our war-relief distributions), we passed some beautiful fields of sunflowers. We could not resist stopping to take pictures. Lots of pictures—until we noticed a sign warning of land mines. That sight abruptly ended our photo session!” 

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - August 4, 2023

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

1. Sam and Amy Slobodian are in Ukraine this week participating in our summer camps and surveying our war-relief efforts. They report, “Yesterday we spent time with Vitaly and Natalia, a Ukrainian couple that has played a large role in our war-relief efforts, especially in the area of Donetsk, which is in Donbas, where they have many contacts. They told us of a church of 100 we have been helping through them. It is only 15 miles from Bakhmut, which has seen probably the heaviest fighting for months. When the war started, 80% of the congregation left for the West, including their pastor and his family. Although only 15 members remained, they worked hard distributing the aid we have been providing to the community. As a result, their auditorium is full to overflowing for services, and many have been saved!” These kinds of reports are what we are hearing from all over Ukraine!

2. With Ukrainian husbands and sons battling on the front lines of the war, wives and moms left behind often have little income to purchase prescription medicines and other vital needs. Some BIEM missionary wives are stepping into the gap to meet this need in their communities, once again using physical aid to encourage neighbors in spiritual truths. Learn more through this brief video:

https://vimeo.com/851436460

3. Our church planters’ efforts in distributing war relief often involve crossing the border pulling trailers into Poland, where they purchase much of the aid they are distributing. On their return trips, the Polish and Ukrainian border and Customs personnel often begin their inspection with the question, “Are you transporting any alcohol or narcotics?” Our men have learned that the best answer is, “Of course not. We’re Baptist pastors.” Almost always, they are waved through because it’s well established among the border guards (and general population) that Baptists do not consume alcohol. One of our men heard one border guard instructing a rookie that when a Baptist pastor comes through you don’t need to worry about them possessing drugs or alcohol. One Polish border guard made the following remark to one of our missionaries: “Oh, I know the difference between you Baptist priests and our Catholic priests. You cannot drink alcohol, but you can have a wife. Our priests cannot marry, but they can drink all the alcohol they want!”

4. One of the big differences in shipping containers of humanitarian aid to Ukraine during the war is that the containers no longer need to be fumigated and may now contain food. Our last container had tons of rice as well as macaroni & cheese fortified with vitamins. These food products have been very well received in Ukraine. 

5. Many of you have met Vitaly Yurchenko, the tall Ukrainian church planter who started a church in Chervona Sloboda, right across the street from the main employer in the area, which is an alcohol distillery. His church is only 2 miles from territory that the Russian army had occupied. This location made the church building a prime stopping point for many people who were evacuating as well as for electrical brigades that were sent to that area to restore electrical service (which took several weeks) after the area was liberated. This church even hosted a group of soldiers on leave and has hosted many others engaged in war-relief distribution. To accommodate all this activity, which will continue for some time, the congregation found it necessary to add on to their building. All the walls are up, but funds are needed to complete this project. Please pray that the Lord would supply what is needed. If you can help, that will be much appreciated.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM

War Relief Updates - July 28, 2023

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

1. In Chernovtsy, Ukraine, a special conference was held to help and inform any volunteers involved in distributing war relief, including unbelievers. There, 6 souls came to Christ, and 3 others renewed their commitments to Christ. BIEM friends who attended declared this conference inspired them to continue serving, rebuilding their country, and aiding those in need.

2.  In a previous update, we mentioned the need for a replacement for our aged forklift, which stopped working and was too expensive to repair. By God’s grace and through the generosity of friends, our warehouse now has a brand-new, electrical unit that accomplishes all the heavy lifting and moving that our outmoded model did, yet in a more compact size. This new piece of equipment is a great help in hoisting and moving heavy pallets of war relief. Thank you to those who sent generous gifts to make this purchase possible!

3. In recent days, Russia’s escalation in firing missiles at cities all over Ukraine is continuing, with destructive consequences that affect BIEM’s church planters and those distributing war relief. One of those cities that was struck on July 21 is Goncharovsk, where our church planter Sasha Petrenko ministers.

While city authorities state officially that 2 civilians were killed, local residents say they could see the military base bore the brunt of that attack and that many military were no doubt killed. In the following video, Sasha describes this event, shows some of the destruction, and discusses their evacuation efforts.

https://vimeo.com/849527858

4. The brother-in-law of BIEM’s Field Director for Central Asia was hauling a truckload of war relief toward Odessa in southern Ukraine. At one stop, a group of strongmen tried to shanghai him into the Ukrainian military right on the spot. Only by showing proof that he was exempt due to the great amount of humanitarian aid he regularly delivers did he barely restrain them. He remains a non-combatant civilian who is serving Ukraine (and the Lord!) without a uniform.

5. On July 26, Sam and Amy Slobodian left for Ukraine, where they will be participating in three different camps as well as surveying our relief efforts. Thanks to generous donations for tourniquets, they were able to bring a large case of these much-needed items with them. This delivery brings the total of specialized tourniquets BIEM has provided so far to around 300.

Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM