Lending a Hand in Ukraine

Amid the brutality and destruction,people around the world have reached out to help those caught in the crossfire.Here are a few of their stories

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Amid the brutality and destruction,people around the world have reached out to help those caught in the crossfire.Here are a few of their stories

PROJECT DYNAMO

By Andy Simmons

Alex Spektor was nervous. He was in Poland near the Ukrainian border about to meet his twin sons, Lenny and Moishe, for the first time. The boys were just 10 days old, born pre-maturely to a surrogate mother in Kyiv. The day before, on 24 February,Russia had invaded Ukraine. With the country under siege and his under-sized babies in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) requiring oxygen and constant monitoring, Spektor had no clue how he would get them home to Chicago safely.

Then he heard about Bryan Stern.The Army/Navy veteran runs the non-profit Project Dynamo, which sends combat vets—all unpaid volunteers like Stern—into war zones to rescue Americans and allies trying to flee.

Though 14,000 people were already seeking Stern’s services, when Spektorreached out to him Stern recognized just how dire the situation was for Lenny and Moishe.

“If dust gets in the NICU, they’re in trouble. If the power goes out, they're in trouble. If there’s a bunch of shot-up troops and the doctors get spread thin, then they’re in trouble. So, the bottom line is getting out of Kyiv,”Stern told NPR.But extracting the twins would require more than a fast car. The precious cargo had to be monitored and watched continuously by medical staff. To keep tabs on them during the 13-hour trip to the Polish border,Stern arranged for two ambulances,two doctors, two neonatal specialists,a nurse and a Ukrainian ambulance crew. Stern would follow in his car to navigate the various checkpoints and live fire.

Then there was an added wrinkle:Baby Sophie, another preemie who needed to be rescued. Born two days after the boys, she was even more fragile than the twins. This was quickly becoming the toughest rescue Project Dynamo had faced.

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