Showing posts with label Ukraine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ukraine. Show all posts

Friday, August 2, 2024

Today in the Mission Yearbook - PC(USA) pastor brings stories from Ukraine to a U.S. audience

The Rev. Dr. Robert Gamble, executive director of This Child Here, visits Mid-Kentucky Presbytery

August 2, 2024

This Child Here is an organization that ministers to families affected 

by the war in Ukraine. (Photo courtesy of This Child Here)

In a presentation that featured a Zoom conversation with three people on the ground in Ukraine, the Rev. Dr. Robert Gamble, executive director of This Child Here, recently spoke on the topic “The Lamentations of Ukraine” with clergy and members of churches in Mid-Kentucky Presbytery. Gamble and others illustrated ways that This Child Here, a ministry validated by the Presbytery of Western North Carolina, works with families, mostly women and children, displaced by the war in Ukraine.

Near the end of Gamble’s talk, an app on his smartphone sounded, indicating another Russian drone attack on Izmail, where This Child Here operates in southwest Ukraine near the Black Sea. Among the warnings the app issues during a drone attack: “Overconfidence is your greatest enemy.”

After three visits to Ukraine, Gamble established This Child Here in 2006. Eighteen years later, “after working with street kids, working in orphanages, training foster families and teaching peacemaking techniques to teens, Ukraine is at war,” he told people gathered for his talk and for lunch at John Knox Presbyterian Church in Louisville, “and we now work with families displaced by this war.”

Olya Balaban hugs a child in Ukraine. (Photo 

courtesy of This Child Here)

“Everyone I meet has a story of pain, loss and lament,” Gamble said, citing these passages in the Book of Lamentations: “How deserted lies the city, once so full of people! How like a widow is she,” followed later by, “Young and old lie together in the dust of the streets.”

“This is Ukraine,” he said. “Bodies in the dust of the streets.”

Gamble said This Child Here “just started with what we knew to be the right thing: meeting families at grocery stores, paying for what they needed, gathering a list of names and faces.” Then, “we organized a summer camp at a retreat center near the beaches of Bulgaria. People bonded. We rented buildings and opened centers for sports and creative activity. … I did not know that so much care could be given without words. I didn’t know there is a therapy of belonging, a therapy of place, a therapy of recreation which could also be worded ‘re-creation,’ and a therapy of lament.”

Participants heard from three people at This Child Here’s facility in Izmail, including Olya Balaban, the ministry’s program manager. A recorded clip showed Balaban and Gamble enduring a drone attack together.

The Rev. Dr. Robert Gamble

“It’ll take some victories on the battlefield before Ukraine can prevail,” Gamble said of the war. “Families come to us with their lamentations. Each story I hear is its own howl of pain, often unbearably beautiful in language and honest, brutal in detail. We get the whole searing account of the siege and destruction of Ukraine.” Gamble borrowed from the book “A is for Alabaster: 52 Reflections on the Stories of Scriptures,” written by his friend, Anna Carter Florence.

Asked how youth served by This Child Here make their plans for the future, Balaban replied, “It’s hard to plan even for today. We try to support mothers and children every day” and plan camps “on the sea every summer.”

It can be difficult, Balaban said, for staff and others to find out what’s going on in other regions of Ukraine. “We get our information from our president [Volodymyr Zelenskyy], from the government and from people who write about it,” Balaban said.

Operating This Child Here since the war began with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, is “our evidence of grace and power,” according to Gamble.

“Surrounding these families and their stories, holding each lightly yet firmly, is a structure I can only define as a healing community of love and trust. It is our life together,” Gamble said, quoting Florence’s book. “It allows the words to pour out without bleeding out.”

“There is a rhythm we enter into each day and week, in our gatherings in Izmail, Ukraine, in our talk, and in our play, by which, with our vessel — namely, the community itself — we gently guide these families toward speech and hope when the wilderness of grief has taken both,” Gamble said, again referencing “A is for Alabaster.”

Click here to learn more about This Child Here.

 Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service

Today’s Focus: The Rev. Dr. Robert Gamble, executive director of This Child Here

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Betsey and Eric Moe, Mission co-workers serving in Guatemala, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Diane Moffett, President, Executive Director, Presbyterian Mission Agency

Let us pray

Great God, bless the hearts and hands of those who work in your name. Give us heart to live as witnesses in all the places where the presence of faith shouts hope despite all the chaos of our world and its disasters. Amen.

Tuesday, July 19, 2022

Today in the Mission Yearbook - Doing something good in the face of evil

Ohio church accompanist, a native of Ukraine, gathers her countrymen for a benefit concert

July 19,  2022

Diana Chubak, the accompanist at Immanuel Presbyterian Church in Cincinnati, visits with concert-goers. (Photo by Brad Sheppard)

The Rev. Brad Sheppard, pastor of Immanuel Presbyterian Church in Cincinnati, received an email one Sunday from the church’s accompanist, Diana Chubak, a doctoral student at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. Earlier that day, Sheppard had asked Chubak to suggest organizations to support in the wake of the Russian invasion of her native Ukraine.

In his reply to Chubak, Sheppard suggested to her the idea of a benefit concert to raise money for Ukraine. What he didn’t know is that she was already entertaining the idea. She quickly replied as much, and that holding the benefit concert at the church “would be great.”

On March 13, more than 125 people gathered in the church’s sanctuary in support of the three Ukrainian student musicians and to raise money for two organizations: a Ukrainian foundation and Presbyterian Disaster Assistance.

One student played an original composition. The music was moving, and the event not only raised $3,000 but also gave the community an opportunity to show their support to the students and their homeland.

The benefit concert also initiated conversations with other congregations in the region who would like to hold a benefit concert featuring the students, including Cincinnati’s Hyde Park Community United Methodist Church and Covenant Presbyterian Church in Springfield, Ohio.

“In the midst of devastation, the concert provided an opportunity to celebrate the beauty of music and in the face of evil to do some good,” Sheppard said. “Of course, the money raised will be helpful. But as important was the experience of the concert itself and the opportunity to show the students support.”

“Andrii [Isakov], Maksym [Mahlay] and I are extremely grateful to Immanuel Presbyterian Church and its pastor, Brad Sheppard, for helping us organize a benefit concert for Ukraine,” Chubak said. “We were truly touched by how many people came to stand with us, our fellow Ukrainians and our homeland. We gathered together in unity for peace in Ukraine and against the Russian war.”

“These Americans showed their support by not only attending the concert but donating to organizations that are providing emergency assistance to our army and refugees,” Chubak said. “It was meaningful to share with this audience a small piece of our rich Ukrainian culture in the form of music by Ukrainian composers. United we stand and together we will win!”

Immanuel Presbyterian Church, Special to Presbyterian News Service

Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Khulan Baigalimaa, Trust Operations Administrator-Funds Services, Presbyterian Foundation
Janelle Baker, Mission Specialist, Racial Equity & Women’s Intercultural Ministries, Presbyterian Mission Agency

Let us pray

Dear God, please bless the witness and ministry of the Presbyterian churches. May others see in them your grace and love and be drawn to know you in your Son, our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. We ask it in his name. Amen.

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