Home » Featured » Ukraine: Sisters of Saint Joseph: Our convents have become refugee centres

Ukraine: Sisters of Saint Joseph: Our convents have become refugee centres

Millions of people have had to flee their homes to save themselves and their children, abandoning the regions of the east and south of Ukraine, and heading west. According to recent figures by UNHCR almost four million have crossed the borders into neighbouring countries, but over six and a half million are thought to be displaced within the country.

“There are people sleeping in every corner of the monastery, both in beds and on mattresses on the floor. They are very grateful for the opportunity to wash, eat hot meals and get some rest. Some spent several days in basements or in air-raid shelters”, says Sister Tobiasza, a nun from the Congregation of Saint Joseph, in a conversation with the Aid to the Church in Need foundation, which has just approved a special aid package for nuns from all the Latin rite religious orders carrying out this charitable and hospitable work in the Archdiocese of Lviv.

A sister of the Congregation of St. Joseph in Lviv with a refugee family.

“We help the refugees and locals who are in difficult situations due to the war”, the nun explains. The Sisters of Saint Joseph set up a transit point for refugees in their monastery in Lviv, where refugees can rest and recover their strength. The sisters also help make contacts and search for families that can welcome refugees in other places, mostly in Poland. Finally, they coordinate the drivers to transport families, many of which are composed of mothers with their children.

Whether big or small, each of the order’s houses or convents has been turned into a point of refuge for the most needy: “In another of our convents, in the city of Stryi, the sisters prepared a room to host a family of two children and a grandmother. With the help of local and foreign benefactors they managed to buy a washing machine, a refrigerator, beds, and so on. All the basics to be able to live. One of the boys is sick and needs special care and food”, explains Sister Tobiaszca.

Since the ACN aid package will benefit all the nuns in the Archdiocese of Lviv, Sister Edita Duszczak, president of the association of women’s Latin rite Catholic congregations of Ukraine, wrote to the foundation to say: “In the name of all the religious sisters of the Archdiocese of Lviv, I express my great gratitude for the help you have provided us until now; and therefore we dare to ask for support once again, to be able to serve and help in this difficult time of war in Ukraine which God has seen fit to allow us to live through”.

Don't miss the latest updates!

Nigerian bishop on school kidnappings: “Our hearts are broken, but our faith remains firm”

“Evil will never win,” said Nigeria’s National Security Advisor, during…

Pope is travelling to Lebanon to “heal wounds” and “work for peace”

Lebanon is still recovering from years of conflict and economic…

Nigerian Bishops: “Lasting peace cannot be achieved through silence or delay”

Catholic Bishops of Nigeria warn of escalating violence and call…

New mass abduction of schoolgirls in northern Nigeria

The attack represents “a major blow to the education of…

Four Christians killed, villages razed in fresh attack in Mozambique

An estimated 128,000 people have had to flee the affected…

Nigeria: Priest abducted in the Archdiocese of Kaduna

The west African nation has been classified as suffering from…

Red Week 2025: A global cry for religious freedom

Over half a million people are expected to take part…

Nigerian bishop on school kidnappings: “Our hearts are broken, but our faith remains firm”

“Evil will never win,” said Nigeria’s National Security Advisor, during a visit to the bishop of Kontagora, where over 300 children were kidnapped in late November. Bishop Bulus Dauwa Yohanna...

ACN raises religious freedom concerns at European Parliament’s “Human Dignity” event

Aid to the Church in Need (ACN - International) recently took part in the “Human Dignity” event, part of the yearly “European Prayer Breakfast”, which was held on Wednesday, 3...

Amid a fragile respite, an urgent plea from Gaza before Christmas

The Catholic parish in Gaza prepares for Advent during an unstable ceasefire. From the heart of the devastated city, Fr Gabriel Romanelli of the Holy Family parish describes a disastrous...