
Croatia church holds Easter event for Ukrainian refugee families
Grace Point Church of the Nazarene in Zagreb, Croatia, hosted an Easter community event on 12 April 2025 at the Ukrainian refugee camp where the church
Grace Point Church of the Nazarene in Zagreb, Croatia, hosted an Easter community event on 12 April 2025 at the Ukrainian refugee camp where the church
The Ukraine District recently gathered in Lviv, Ukraine, for its first in-person District Assembly since 2020. With General Superintendent Carla Sunberg in attendance, the event
The eyes of the church and the world have been on Ukraine for nearly three years now, as the war between Russia and Ukraine has
The House of Mercy ministries, located in a small village outside Odesa, Ukraine, as become a beacon of light for over 40 individuals internally displaced due to the war or needing rehabilitation services.
Pastors and leaders across Ukraine joined in Lviv for a week of prayer, teaching, and encouragement, some returning to Ukraine for the first time in two years. Here is a firsthand testimony of the impact of that week.
A UK family volunteered to host a Ukrainian refugee in their home upon the onset of the war in 2021. Quickly, they all found family within each other.
The Odesa Church of the Nazarene building was severely damaged during a barrage of missile strikes in Odesa, Ukraine, during the early morning on 23 July. The explosion blew out all of the windows and rendered the doors unusable, causing the church to shut down for over a week.
Men and women from all backgrounds met to learn more about the effects of trauma this January. A handful of Ukrainians gathered together for an event in collaboration with collaboration among the Eurasia North Field, Central Europe Field, Nazarene Compassionate Ministries (NCM), and Global Care Force.
At Vapniarka Church of the Nazarene, a team of volunteers began to unload the boxes of coats when two missiles flew directly overhead. Church leader Tolik Galagan was momentarily frozen, his eyes growing large in surprise. “I was afraid,” he remembers.
It was the summer of 2022, and Zee was living with the daily tension of a life in two places—the life of a refugee. When the war broke out, Gimon’s husband joined the Ukrainian territorial guard. The couple decided that she and their two children would remain at home.