Hope for ‘перемога’ inside a blue and yellow heart
Olya Balaban displays some of the artwork contributed by children cared for at This Child Here in Ukraine. (Photo by Jim Nedelka) |
All went well for most of Gamble’s first dozen years in country. Then, on Feb. 24, 2022, Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, invaded Ukraine, widening his open hostilities begun following Ukraine’s 2014 revolution and the early stages of war; Gamble would later say during his afternoon presentation, “When war comes, you pivot.”
Seven days a week, This Child Here finds itself challenged to meet the needs of the expanded definition of “children of God.” The Center provides a safe space for families:
A girl named Diana created this piece bearing the message “hope for victory.” (Photo by Jim Nedelka) |
Teens and young adults, many of whom once toughed it out on the streets as children now being called up to tough it out fighting for their country, if they didn’t “go over the hill,” as the saying goes, abandoning their homeland and families.
Those of all ages with special needs because “every person matters.”
Six of those seven days are devoted to programs designed for children; on the seventh day, instead of resting, the Center devotes its primary focus to programs and discussions, offering a shoulder to lean on to the women of the area.
The Rev. Dr. Robert Gamble speaks at Avenue Church NYC in Manhattan. (Photo by Jim Nedelka) |
Far away from the storm of war on this Wednesday afternoon in New York’s avenue church, one with a long history of outreach to those in need beginning from its founding in 1877 as a congregation for Czech immigrants, Balaban opens a large, thin cardboard box revealing “hope” displayed in a triptych of snapshots from life in and around Izmail and the Center, all framed by children’s drawings. Among the masterpieces in crayon, the viewer’s eye is drawn to one along the bottom left. Its colors are not quite as vivid and strong as the others, but this drawing by eight-year old Diana still provides a strong pull for the viewer: under a yellow sun in a bird-filled sky sits a small brown and tan house with a red heart on its roof. A small dog stands in the side yard facing three red flowering plants spread out along a pathway leading to a blue and yellow heart, the color scheme in the manner of Ukraine’s flag.
Inside the heart’s yellow portion, Diana has emblazoned the word “перемог;” Balaban translates as she points to the Cyrillic: “Peremoha – Per-eh – MO-ha,” she helpfully pronounces. “Victory. Hope for victory.”
Gamble, an eloquent storyteller, describes the catharsis of people helping people, often strangers comforting the grief of other strangers.
Unlike other efforts by unnamed organizations that seem to parachute into Ukraine with supplies and goods then depart, Gamble vows that This Child Here will remain in country, continuing their years of efforts to build communities. Balaban, who was born in Russia when it was spelled “CCCP,” echoes the sentiment. “I see hope with the generation that has grown up with 30 years of Ukraine freedom.”
Jim Nedelka, Special to Presbyterian News Service
Let us join in prayer for:
James Carey, Director of Investments & Portfolio Management Services, Presbyterian Foundation
Tim Cargal, Director of Mid-Council Ministries, Office of the General Assembly
Let us pray:
Sovereign Lord, empower us as we pursue your truth in your Word, and fill us with your transformative Spirit, that we might work to overcome discord, injustice and division through our peace, justice and reconciliation. Amen.
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