Adventist Churches in Poland Serving as Places of Refuge

“The family is getting bigger,” said Marek Micyk

News March 4, 2022

04 March 2022 | Rzeszów, Poland [Dejan Stojkovic and ADRA Europe with tedNEWS]

Seventh-day Adventist churches in Poland are becoming shelters for Ukrainian refugees. The Adventist Development Relief Agency (ADRA) in Poland is working in cooperation with the local church and a large number of volunteers to show solidarity with refugees from Ukraine.

“It was absolutely beautiful to see this church, and the work they are doing,” said Dejan Stojkovic, Trans-European Division Youth director, reflecting on his ongoing visit to the Rzeszów  and Przemysl Adventist churches in Poland. “To come back from the border with Ukraine and start a Sabbath with the volunteers and the refugees is very special,” he remarked.

 

“The family is getting bigger,” said Marek Micyk [Photos: courtesy of Dejan Stojkovic]

Marek Micyk, Polish Union Conference Youth director, also felt moved by the experience and the palpable solidarity. “I like this picture we are creating…  To see that even amid disaster, we have family everywhere. Those people that are coming, we do not know them yet, but we know already that we are family. The family is getting bigger.”

Both leaders urged church members to continue praying and supporting reliefs efforts. “As a second Sabbath just started, while the war is raging in Ukraine, we are grateful for these volunteers and pray for ways to brighten the corners of the world where we live,” said Stojkovic.

Can I Hug You?

Michael Peach joined the ADRA team in Poland all the way from sunny Australia. At night, when he was supporting people fleeing Ukraine, he met an elderly lady that touched his heart. “As we stood shivering at the border an old lady walked up to my colleague, gave her a big hug, burst into tears and said, ‘THANK YOU’. We hadn’t done anything, but we were the first friendly faces she’d seen in a while,” Peach shared.

 

Michael and Dejan serving at the Ukrainian border

“The people of Poland have literally opened their homes to their neighbours fleeing Ukraine, it is a beautiful thing,” Peach continued. “At midnight it’s -5° Celsius and thousands of women, children and pets are crossing the border with no real certainty. Some have relatives waiting for them, but most board buses to reception centres where they can be linked with a Polish host family. This week ADRA has been providing blankets petrol (the nearest petrol station is 100Km from the border) and USB power banks.”

In Search of Peace

It is estimated that 1 million to 2 million Ukrainians already live in Poland. Many fled in 2014, after the takeover of Crimea and the beginning of the war in eastern Ukraine. And now, so far, at least 505,000 Ukrainians have gone to Poland. It is the prayer of us all that peace will come soon.

 

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