Twenty years ago, Alla Galych helped two Ukrainian orphans get into university. When Russia attacked, she stepped up again to help them escape
"When I landed in Toronto, someone suddenly ran over and hugged me. I was frightened at first, but then I realized it was my daughter"
For Anna Gutta-Ustymenko, fleeing to safety also meant leaving her spouse behind
"I try not to pay attention to soaring costs in my hometown too closely. It just brings me down"
"Our sons were waiting for us when we arrived at Pearson. We started crying as soon as we saw them"
"Our volunteers are risking their lives doing this work—there are bombs and Russian missiles falling all over Ukraine right now"
"My mother called every day, begging me to come back to Canada, but I didn’t want to believe that the Russians would actually invade"
"Performing Mozart's Requiem turned into a way for me to console the pain that I hadn’t fully come to terms with"
"Everyone I encounter seems to be fuelled by anger and high anxiety"
Front-line confessions, pandemic pivots and cross-country adventures
What he misses, what he doesn't miss and what he's looking forward to
"There was blood dripping from his fingers onto the floor, trailing to the entranceway of the McDonald’s"
My neighbour left a voicemail: "Your house is on fire"
I was unconscious, on the brink of death, and then I woke up with two healthy new lungs
The discovery of Indigenous children’s remains was particularly hard for me—because I knew I could have been one of them