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A Comprehensive Look at Four Years of CORE’s Ukraine Response

Three Years of CORE’s Ukraine Response

In early March 2022, days after the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, CORE arrived in Poland to activate an immediate response to support Ukrainians in need. Based in Rzeszow, the team rapidly spread into the countryside, seeking out informal shelters where everyday Polish citizens were offering what space they had to the deluge of refugees crossing the border. Within the first 12 days of the war, 2 million Ukrainians fled to neighboring countries, seeking safety from the violence and uncertainty at home. 

CORE’s Immediate Regional Response

In Poland, CORE supported informal shelters, provided cash assistance, set up a warehouse to ship critical supplies into Ukraine, established social integration programs for refugees, and worked alongside IOM to retrofit existing buildings into capable shelter centers.

 

CORE’s response quickly spread to Romania, and soon after Ukraine itself, where our response effort is now based as the conflict enters its fourth year.

Providing Essential Resources to Frontline Areas

Across Poland and Romania, many refugee families were unable to meet basic needs including food, medication, and hygiene items. CORE transferred supplies from both Poland and Romania into Ukraine with truckloads and shipments of relief items, reaching western Ukraine and frontline areas and heavily shelled towns in southern Ukraine.

 

Within Romania, CORE also supported the Romexpo Humanitarian Hub, the largest refugee resource center in Bucharest, providing informal shelter solutions, and distributing much-needed cash relief to Ukrainians.

Ukraine In Focus

Since 2022, the work of our dedicated Ukrainian team has been comprehensive and widespread, touching 17 of Ukraine’s 24 oblasts. CORE has met urgent needs by delivering food, hygiene kits, cash assistance, and heating fuel.

 

CORE has also been systematically addressing longer-term needs through infrastructure repair, winterization, and supporting administrative centers. CORE has built, reconstructed, and repaired bomb shelters, schools, individual homes, and playgrounds.  

CORE’s Ongoing Commitment

In the last six months of 2024 alone, more than 200,000 Ukrainians have been forced to flee their homes, bringing the total number of displaced persons to a staggering 10.6 million.

 

In the cold of January, coordinated largescale Russian attacks on Ukrainian energy infrastructure caused emergency power outages in seven regions.

 

Every day, the fighting continues. There is more to be done, and there will be much to do long after the guns are silenced. CORE remains committed to adapting our critical programs to support Ukrainians and efforts to rebuild for the long haul. 

 

If you’d like to stay up-to-date with our ongoing response in Ukraine or would like to support this important work, please visit our Ukraine Response landing page.