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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."In Warsaw, refugees experience kindness from volunteers and distant connections
The flood of arrivals is visible in Warsaw, where the central train station has been transformed, with information booths, volunteer translators and free coffee.

Among the refugees there is Olha Kudenko, a compliance manager who fled Kyiv three weeks ago with her French bulldog, Lion. She said she has been staying with a friend's brother in Warsaw.

On Tuesday, Kudenko had returned to the station to find help for a friend – another young woman currently en route from Kyiv, who was traveling with just a single set of clothes, Kudenko said.

"She's very disoriented and very scared," Kudenko said, who was hoping to find extra clothes for her friend to wear.

In the three weeks since she left Kyiv, Kudenko said she has cried every night. "It's very painful that somebody has the right to come to my home, to make me leave this home and destroy everything I loved and worked for," she said.

Leaving behind their lives and families, Ukrainian refugees are left to leverage the most tenuous of connections for help. That's been the experience of Liudmyla Zakharchuk, a 70-year-old Ukrainian woman in a black parka and pink hat, who is standing in line at a currency exchange shop with Anna Szydywar, a Polish woman in her 20s wearing a bright yellow coat.

Zakharchuk left her home in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city, in early March, she said, after enduring nightly shelling since Russian forces invaded on Feb. 24.

"I was tired of sitting in the basement, hiding all the time," Zakharchuk said, tears shining on her cheeks, as Szydywar translated. "Somehow the dignity of a person, of a human being, is lost."

Her son drove her to the border with Poland. After crossing, a stranger drove her to Warsaw, she said, where she met up with Szydywar — the niece of a friend of a friend.

After a week in Poland, with the support of Szydywar and other Poles – "caring, helpful and ready to serve," as Zakharchuk described them – she was planning to fly to Spain, where she would stay with her brother until she could safely return to Kharkiv.

"It's a beautiful and vibrant city. I have my life there. It needs to be rebuilt after the war, so I will for sure go back home," she said."...
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