
 
		5 
 COURIER LIFE, MARCH 25-31, 2022 
 Greenpoint neighbors  
 raise more than $20k  
 for Ukrainian refugees 
 BY KIRSTYN BRENDLEN 
 In just a few  weeks, a fundraiser  
 spearheaded by Greenpoint residents  
 has raised more than $20,000 for Ukrainian  
 refugees arriving in Poland. 
 When the invasion began late last  
 month, New York City’s focus turned  
 largely toward the Ukrainian enclaves  
 in the city, in Manhattan’s Ukrainian  
 Village and Brighton Beach’s Little  
 Odessa — but the news was hitting just  
 as hard in heavily-Polish Greenpoint,  
 especially once millions of Ukrainian  
 refugees fleeing their homes found  
 safety in Poland. 
 Jennifer  Cooper,  a  longtime  resident  
 of Greenpoint, spoke with her  
 friends and neighbors as  the war unfolded  
 on television screens and newspapers, 
  and as firsthand accounts  
 from friends and family on the ground  
 in Poland started coming in. 
 They decided to do something, and  
 joined forces with the Greenpointbased  
 Polish and Slavic Federal Credit  
 Union to launch an online fundraiser  
 for Caritas, a nonprofit providing direct  
 aid for Ukrainians crossing the  
 border. 
 “They mobilize volunteers, they really  
 do provide frontline relief to those  
 who are entering the country at the  
 border,” Cooper said. “Meals, money,  
 directions, a place to stay. All of the  
 things that they need in an emergency  
 situation.” 
 A longtime employee of the United  
 Nations, Cooper is familiar with Caritas’s  
 work and knew the money raised  
 would be well used. 
 The GoFundMe went live on March  
 4. By March 7, more than $5,000 had  
 been donated. On March 9, that number  
 had doubled, and, just two weeks  
 later,  donors  have  contributed  more  
 than $22,000 to Ukrainian refugees.  
 “Most of the contributions have been  
 generated  through word of mouth,  I  
 have to say, and direct outreach,” she  
 said.  “And  a  number  of  local  businesses  
 have contributed as well.” 
 Working with the credit union  
 spares the group having to collect the  
 money in one of their personal bank  
 accounts, and, even better, the company  
 has agreed to waive all the international  
 transfer fees, so not one cent  
 is wasted. 
 “The credit union has a long history  
 in the neighborhood of supporting  
 people arriving from Poland,” Cooper  
 said. “Who, when they came here back  
  Photo by REUTERS/Hannah McKay 
 in the 70s, they couldn’t get credit. PSFCU 
  was able to give credit to people  
 who were arriving to buy houses. So  
 they’re a really important part of the  
 building of this neighborhood and its  
 identity.” 
 According to the UN, more than 3  
 million people have left Ukraine since  
 February, with more than 1.8 million  
 crossing  the  border  to  Poland. Many  
 are staying with friends and family,  
 but thousands more are seeking aid  
 and shelter, especially in the country’s  
 large cities. 
 Nonprofits like Caritas are providing  
 food,  shelter,  medical  care,  and  
 guidance, and Cooper said many of her  
 Polish friends and neighbors are sending  
 money right to their family members  
 on the ground. 
 “What I really hope is that people  
 who are not necessarily old-school, so  
 to speak, from the neighborhood, will  
 also continue to care about this,” Cooper  
 said. “And I hope we started the  
 conversation. The new people moving  
 in have an appreciation for the cultural  
 heritage of this neighborhood  
 and take some responsibility to help  
 out in a situation of dire need. I’m optimistic  
 on that.” 
 She’s also hopeful that people will  
 stay engaged with the conflict and the  
 needs of Ukrainian refugees as the  
 war draws on, as the demand for resources  
 is probably only going to grow  
 as time passes. The fundraiser has no  
 end date or fundraising cap — it will  
 stay open as long as it needs to. 
 Two of Cooper’s neighbors are getting  
 ready to take a trip to Poland in  
 the coming weeks, she said. They’re  
 feeling nervous, but also like it’s an  
 important thing to do. 
 “We’re trying to do whatever we  
 can,” she said. “We tried to make it  
 easy for people who had the question  
 ‘What can I do to make a difference?’” 
 for end of war 
 newly elected southern  
 Brooklyn Councilmembers  
 Ari Kagan and Inna  
 Vernikov, both of whom have  
 eastern European roots. 
 Kagan,  who  immigrated  
 from Belarus in 1993 and  
 represents Bensonhurst, Coney  
 Island, Gravesend, and  
 Sea Gate in the City Council,  
 has publicly condemned the  
 invasion and said that it was  
 “unprovoked aggression”  
 against a peaceful neighbor. 
 Speaking Saturday on  
 the boardwalk, his calls for  
 resolution received resounding  
 applause. 
 Councilmember Inna  
 Vernikov, whose neighboring  
 district also includes  
 a large number of Ukrainian  
 immigrants, and who  
 herself immigrated from  
 Ukraine at a young age, has  
 similarly condemned the invasion, 
  and said her office  
 will be open to assist anyone  
 in need. 
 While she wasn’t in attendance  
 at this weekend (the  
 newly minted rep instead accepted  
 an invitation to meet  
 with former President Donald  
 Trump), Vernikov appeared  
 to keep her constituents  
 in mind over the course  
 of her visit, despite the former  
 leader’s ties to Putin. 
 “Grateful to have met  
 with President Trump,” she  
 tweeted Sunday. “He expressed  
 his solidarity with  
 the people of Ukraine and  
 sent prayers and love for my  
 constituents from Ukraine.” 
 Brighton Beach has  
 earned the nickname “Little  
 Odessa,” owing to its population  
 and its perch near the  
 beach, just as the moniker’s  
 Ukrainian namesake. 
 Additional reporting by  
 Ben Brachfeld and Matt Tracy