Three Ukrainians tell how Samaritan’s Purse and a local partner are serving their hard-hit community with this life-giving resource.
Clean Water Offers Hope
A full-scale invasion continues to devastate the Dnipro region of eastern Ukraine, where residents have tragically lost their jobs, property, and all they have worked for their entire lives. But perhaps the worst effects of the war came when the local hydroelectric plant was blown up by enemy forces, leaving people without access to one of life’s most basic necessities—water.
Three residents—Oleksander*, Oksana*, and Anna*—each reveal a different nuance of the tragedy as well as the hope Samaritan’s Purse is providing their families through the supply of clean water given in Jesus’ Name.
Oleksander: ‘People Couldn’t Make Tea or Take a Shower’
“Can you imagine? The most basic things are unavailable,” said Oleksander, 28, who was born and raised in the location where the plant blew up. “It’s not easy to come up and get water, for example, for cooking. First, you have to find water to do it. People couldn’t even just make tea or take a shower. All this was a heavy burden for people. For the first few months, the goal of every person in the city was to find water—enough for themselves, their family, or grandchildren.”
Oleksander knew something needed to be done. As a senior leader in a local partner organisation, he worked together with Samaritan’s Purse to drill wells and set up a reverse osmosis water treatment system in his city to supply clean water for up to 500 people a day. Plans are now also in place to install a second water purification system that will double this capacity.
“We hear hundreds of thanks from people for everything we do,” said Oleksander. “I am grateful just as a person that lives in the city for all the efforts made by our organisation and Samaritan’s Purse to help the entire district.”
Oksana: ‘This Water Saves Us’
Oksana, 43, is a widow responsible for three children. Her daughter is terrified by the shelling and her young son is deeply traumatised from the war. Having to fight to find water has only made things worse.
“What does it mean when there is no water in the tap? Fear. We stood from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. with a small child to get at least something,” said Oksana of her initial attempts to get water from large tanks supplied by the city.
She explained that while clean water was readily available in shops, the prices were so exorbitant that she couldn’t afford to buy any. So, when Samaritan’s Purse and a local partner provided them with clean water, it was a huge relief.
“This water saves us,” said Oksana.
Her well-being has significantly improved because now she can drink water, cook meals, and bathe her children without fear of health hazards. Clean water has brought a sense of normalcy to the chaos of their everyday lives in a region wracked by war.
Anna: ‘Thank You Very Much’
Anna, 60, is a pillar of her community. She used to be a chef in the city where she and her husband had worked heartily for 35 years. When the hydroelectric plant blew up, the aging couple was particularly devastated by the lack of fresh water. They spoke of the stage of the disaster when water was available, but unusable.
In order to help point people to Jesus Christ, the source of living water, Samaritan’s Purse has already provided more than 23 million gallons of clean water to war-weary Ukrainians.
*Names have been changed for security.