On 19 May, Jesuit Mission Australia held a Ukraine Emergency Response Webinar about the swift international effort of the Jesuit network in supporting thousands of vulnerable refugees fleeing the crisis in Ukraine.
The webinar welcomed special guests and project partners of Jesuit Mission, Fr Alberto Ares SJ, Director of Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) Europe, and Fr Marius Talos SJ, Director of JRS Romania, who are both managing the situation on the ground.
“The Society of Jesus activated the emergency response in less than a week. We have opened houses from the very beginning to welcome arriving refugees and provide critical support for vulnerable people, including children with cancer and other serious health concerns,” said Fr Alberto.
Thanks to a partnership between Jesuit Mission through Xavier Network and JRS Europe, at-risk communities fleeing Ukraine are being provided with emergency shelter, food, psychosocial support, medical escorts, translation and accompaniment.
“JRS Romania has already attended to more than 10,000 refugees, supporting different aspects of their needs, from welcoming to integrating them,” said Fr Marius.
Among these refugees, more than half are children, who have walked for two days to arrive at the border exhausted and traumatised.
“Meeting an 11-year-old boy (refugee) carrying his trolley without any adult accompanying him, is the most shattering image I have ever witnessed,” said Fr Marius.
“So in front of destruction and shattering dreams, we have to propose and to promote the building up of opportunity and provide long-term solutions including schooling, housing, and services of integration,” said Fr Marius.
The current crisis in Ukraine has prompted dialogue on the plight of refugees around the world, especially with the European Union agreeing in record time to activate protection and legal status to help people fleeing the war in Ukraine.
“Unfortunately I think refugees and migrants, especially from other continents are treated as scapegoats and do not receive the same treatment in Europe. Migration is often instrumentalised to generate fear and polarisation,” said Fr Alberto.
But the Jesuits in Europe are ensuring that refugees are treated with dignity and they are going above and beyond in delivering both immediate and long-term support for those in desperate need. Dance classes and playrooms for children have additionally been set up to allow people to temporarily disconnect from the reality of the world and to laugh.
“For years we have been suffering from social distancing, finally, with this crisis, we are all witnessing and experiencing the importance of social proximity,” said Fr Marius.
The global Society of Jesus has announced its comprehensive programme integrating all humanitarian response activities around Pope Francis’ call to “welcome, protect, advocate, and integrate” refugees. The global programme called One Proposal for Ukraine encompasses:
(a) Reception (“welcome”), providing temporary shelter, food and other essentials, transportation, and operation of call centers;
(b) Protection, providing safe shelter, legal assistance, psychosocial support, education, and health;
(c) Advocacy, addressing education and livelihood needs of refugees; and
(d) Integration, helping reconciliation and awareness-raising through educational, communication, advocacy, and accompaniment activities.
JRS and the Xavier Network are leading the coordination efforts of the programme, with JRS Europe coordinating the regional implementation together with different local actors.
Jesuit Mission Australia has extraordinarily raised nearly half a million dollars to support JRS’ Emergency response to welcome refugees in Ukraine and in neighbouring countries.
To learn more about the Jesuit’s Emergency Response to the Ukraine Crisis, you can watch Jesuit Mission’s webinar here.