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Kitchener-Waterloo

Woolwich Township to donate $10K to humanitarian relief in Ukraine

Woolwich Township will donate $10,000 to support humanitarian efforts in Ukraine. Councillors voted this week to donate the funds to the Mennonite Central Committee, drawing them from an anticipated year-end surplus.

Township will donate funds to Mennonite Central Committee's efforts

Close up shot of a Canadian flad and a Ukrainian flag flying side by side, with tree branches and sky in the background.
Woolwich Township council agreed to give $10,000 to the Mennonite Central Committee Canada to help with efforts in Ukraine following the invasion by Russia. (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Woolwich Township will donate $10,000 to support humanitarian efforts in Ukraine.

Council voted this week to donate the funds to the Mennonite Central Committee, drawing them from an anticipated year-end surplus.

"It's a gift of loveand the impact of that gift on the people of Ukraine will not be lost,"Rick Cober Bauman,executive director of Mennonite Central Committee Canada (MCC), said in an interview with CBC Kitchener-Waterloo.

MCC recently decided to evacuate their North American staff from Ukraine, thoughCober Baumansaid, the charitable organizationis still working closely with local partners and anticipates humanitarian need will be massive.

"Trauma from this military invasion is going to be severe, and then there will be temporary food, temporary shelter, blankets, hopefully locally purchased," he said.

Cober Bauman said in the past, MCC has shipped meat canned in Elmira, Ont., and locally made blankets to Ukraine, something he said he hopes willbegin again.

"All of those are going to be so welcome as soon as we have the level of stability to know wecan actually deliver," he said.

He said, though MCC has longstanding ties to Ukraine, the volatile situation in thecountry makes it difficult to say exactly how the organization will structure its response.

"Really it's a war zone, there's a lot of uncertainty," he said. "We're just glad that we have partners wetrust and established relationships, so that as soon as they are able to function again and funds can move, we'll be able to make a significant response for displaced people in Ukraine."

Not unanimously supported

Woolwich Coun.Murray Martin put forward the motion to provide funding to MCC.

"I don't know in my lifetime that I've ever seen anything of this type of aggression into a country that we're seeing now," Martin told his fellow councillors. "I can't believe what it would be like living there."

Mayor Sandy Shantz and three othercouncillors supported the motion, while councillorScott McMillan abstained, explainingthere were people displaced by war in other countries and the township had not donated to those efforts.

"My heart breaks for the Ukrainian peopleand my heart breaks for all the Canadians of Ukrainian descent,"McMillansaid. "But I don't know how we get to choose the Ukrainians over all that other list of people that have been woken up by the exact same bombs, the exact same air raid sirens, by the exact same type of invading force and occupying force."

In response, Coun. Patrick Merlihansaid council was not prioritizing Ukraine overother humanitarian crises, rather it was making adonationto a charitable organization, whose workit hassupportedin various countries.

"There's a narrative going around about, 'how dare we wake up because Ukrainians are white like us and there are all sorts of atrocities in the world,'" he said. "I get that, but this is not out of character for WoolwichTownship to support MCC and to give them a little bit of money that will go a long way."