Thank you for your concern and for praying for Ukraine and the Ukrainian People
Dear Friends of BIEM,
1. In our last weekly war relief update, I mentioned that we planned to visit Fastiv (about 1 hour southwest of Kyiv) to survey the damage to one of our churches from a nearby bombing. One of the bombs landed 50 meters from the church, which is less than 200 feet. Turns out that windows on the inside were also shattered. (For example, the large windows that separate the church auditorium from the nursery area.) Praise God, we can fund the cost of replacing the doors and windows. We are also thankful that the other Fastiv church was spared, though they could see and hear the missiles passing overhead. Fastiv is a huge railroad center, so the Russians were probably targeting the railway center or the power grid. They missed both, since the missiles destroyed only storage buildings. We were able to see the damage, and someone actually gave us a video of the bombs exploding, which was filmed from a passing train. We will include these on one of our upcoming War Relief Videos we post on our website.
2. Praise God, we have passed the $500,000 mark in war relief aid that has been put into the hands of our people distributing aid in Ukraine. We are so grateful for those who have contributed so generously. Everywhere I stopped in Ukraine, people asked me to pass along their deep appreciation for the help that American believers are providing. It is making a huge impact for the glory of God.
3. Last week we mentioned that a couple of our men (Vitaly Bilyak and Eugene Buyko) received special documents allowing them to leave Ukraine even though they are of military age and did not have enough young children to exempt them from the law requiring they stay. This special permission is connected to humanitarian aid, and they must haul a significant amount back with them. So Vitaly and I traveled together across the border in his car hauling a trailer marked Humanitarian Aid. He must fill and haul it back in on his return trip. Even though we had documents in hand, it is the border guards who ultimately decide who can pass. Praise God that, after a 3 1/2 hour wait, they let Vitaly and I through. We traveled together on our flights to the US from Krakow, Poland. Vitaly’s family is among those we evacuated to the United States through Mexico. After not seeing each other for more than 3 months, it will be a sweet reunion.
4. While I was in Lviv with Vitaly, three Russian missiles flew toward his home city of Ternopil. All three were shot down by Ukrainian air defenses, and pieces from two of them landed in empty fields. The third that went down and rained debris on a brick factory, severely damaging the factory. There are a lot of military installations in that area; the Russians were probably targeting them. Praise God that the Ternopil church has not been hit even though it is less than 100 feet from a railway, and those are also frequent targets of Russian attacks.
5. On July 8, the Eugene Buyko family has an interview at the US Consulate in Krakow, Poland, to determine if they will receive visas for the United States under the “Unite for Ukraine” program. Please pray for the interview to go well so that Eugene’s wife Sophia and 3 daughters will all get visas. Their son Mikhail must remain in Ukraine along with Eugene.
Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM