In August 2025, the front line moved closer to Dnipro. Hundreds of families fleeing shelling now arrive exhausted at our Transit Center each week. We give them a hot meal, a bed, paperwork help, and a route onward. Help us keep the doors open.
In August 2025, Synelnykivskyi district of Dnipropetrovsk region became Ukraine's new front line. The flow of evacuees from shelled villages and towns surged - exhausted families, elderly people, children, people with disabilities. Many arrive with nothing but documents, often not even those. They are too tired to plan, too confused to navigate aid systems alone, and need a safe place to rest, eat, and figure out where to go next. Without a transit hub, they end up sleeping in cars, train statio
In its first two weeks, 700 people passed through. Evacuees stay 1-3 days: they receive hot meals, a bed, medical care, registration, help with humanitarian aid paperwork, and logistics planning for onward placement to relatives, shelters, or rented housing. Funds raised cover salaries of the registrar, logistics coordinator, social manager, medical staff, and administrators who keep the Center running 24/7.
Pomogaem has run transit centers three times across 11 years of war - each time the front line moved, we reopened. This is institutional knowledge no government agency in Ukraine has at this scale: how to receive, stabilize, register, and route hundreds of evacuees a week, in coordination with local authorities and international NGOs. By funding this Center, donors are not just helping today's families - they're sustaining a permanent crisis-response capacity that will protect Ukrainian families
This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).
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