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Ukrainian children and families are being taken in by Polish families

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Slideshow Icon1 of 9Luba Yaschuk and her three children, including Vanya, 11, were on a vacation in Ukraine when the Russian invasion began. They fled to the Polish border without returning home to gather their belongings.

More than 1.5 million Ukrainians — many of them children — have fled since Russia invaded their country over a week ago.

Some are children who had been living at an SOS Children's Village in Brovary, Ukraine, a home for children who have been have been orphaned, abused or neglected.


The international nonprofit finds legal guardians for children without adequate parental care.

One of those guardians, Luba Yaschuk, says the Russians invaded when she was on vacation with the three children she cares for. They immediately headed for the Polish border, leaving everything behind in their home. One of her children, 11-year-old Vanya, says the panic of war — and escaping the war — is all everyone talks about.

The children are now in Poland, taken in by other families associated with SOS Children's Villages. Other Poles are also taking in Ukrainians displaced by war. So many are offering temporary lodging that Polish authorities say they have no immediate need for refugee camps. [Copyright 2022 NPR]

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