News

While soldiers fight, Ukrainians face another threat: hunger

Food access has become a battlefront in Ukraine’s war with Russia.

Almost a year ago, Russia began a blockade of the Black Sea ports that handled 70% of Ukraine’s prewar imports and exports, putting a vice on the economy and raising the price of grain worldwide. Inside the country, especially near the front lines, food insecurity can be an almost daily threat. Were access to dip even slightly, a city like Kherson could face a humanitarian crisis.

Why We Wrote This

Food security has become critical to Ukraine’s defense against the Russian invasion. Volunteers willing to drive and hand out much needed groceries to cities under siege are key to that effort.

Aid workers like World Central Kitchen volunteer Natalia Levinskaya have helped keep that crisis from becoming reality.

Each day she arrives at a distribution center in Mykolaiv at 7 a.m. and then delivers hundreds, if not thousands, of meals until as late as 10 p.m. She and her team are in the phalanx of Ukraine’s wartime civil society, which has met need after need since last February and sustained their country’s fight on the home front. 

The work to meet that kind of demand is immense – but so is the reward, says Ms. Levinskaya. “You feel satisfied and you feel joy,” she says, “the joy that people need you and you do something to help them.”

On a freezing day in Kherson’s Tavricheskii District, about 300 people wait in line beside apartment buildings, next to a small park. A van pulls up. World Central Kitchen volunteers wearing orange vests and black body armor open the back doors, and in 15 minutes, fill every open hand with a Styrofoam container holding a hot meal.

The van then heads to another drop-off by more residential buildings – one of which was partially destroyed by a September artillery attack. As the volunteers distribute bags of food, Russian shelling can be heard hitting the city somewhere in the distance.

Still the locals – parents, pet owners, children, seniors, one person with a herd of goats – keep forming a line. In Kherson, one doesn’t ignore two weeks of free groceries.

Why We Wrote This

Food security has become critical to Ukraine’s defense against the Russian invasion. Volunteers willing to drive and hand out much needed groceries to cities under siege are key to that effort.

Still, “we have a feeling that there’s enough food” in the city, says Natalia Levinskaya, one of the volunteers. “We are not the only ones who help.”

Food access has become a battlefront in Ukraine’s war. Almost a year ago, Russia began a blockade of the Black Sea ports that handled 70% of Ukraine’s prewar imports and exports, putting a vice on the economy and raising the price of grain worldwide. Inside the country, especially near the front lines, food insecurity can be an almost daily threat. Were access to dip even slightly, a city like Kherson could face a humanitarian crisis.

Previous ArticleNext Article