Ryman Helping Ukrainian Children

Yuri Bear project connects older Australians with Ukraine’s most vulnerable.

Ryman Healthcare is on a mission to bring smiles to the faces of 20,000 Ukrainian children.

Yuri Bear project connects older Australians with Ukraine’s most vulnerable.

Yuri Bear project connects older Australians with Ukraine’s most vulnerable.

A mammoth trans-Tasman bear-making mission is underway for the children of Ukraine.

Ryman Healthcare has launched the Yuri Bear project, which aims to make 20,000 knitted bears for some of the 5 million children displaced since the country was invaded by Russia.

Every resident and staff member at Ryman’s 45 retirement villages and the company’s head offices in Australia and New Zealand have been challenged to contribute a bear.

Ryman’s Victorian Sales and Community Relations manager Debra Richardson said the Yuri Bear project was a tangible way older people could make a small difference in the lives of the youngest members of the war-torn country.

“Being so far away it can be difficult to know how we can help,” Richardson said.

“Thousands of Ryman village residents are avid knitters, and this project empowers them to use a skill that they are experts at to send a symbol of love from afar.”

The project is of personal importance to Debra, whose former foster son Yuri remains in Ukraine. Richardson and her family fostered Yuri in Melbourne following the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in the 1980s.

“He has made the decision to stay and fight for his country and his family has been evacuated to safety,” she said.

“The project emerged from my discussions with Yuri about how we could provide support from Australia and New Zealand.

“When I first shared the idea with Yuri he said: ‘Ukraine is stronger with your help, empathy, and love. A million thanks to the millions of people who care’.”

While Richardson’s contact with Yuri has become sporadic as the war rages on and concern grows that his messages could be monitored, the Yuri Bear project is giving Richardson a sense of connection to the man she cared for as a child.

“It is easy to feel totally helpless to what is going on, but small gestures like a handmade bear for a child who has lost almost everything can make a meaningful difference,” she said.

From now until September needles will be clicking across both countries, with speedy knitters already sparking a healthy dose of trans-Tasman competition. The public is also being encouraged to get involved in the project, and public Yuri bear drop off points have been placed at all Ryman villages.

• To find out more, or to get involved, visit:
https://www.rymanhealthcare.com.au/yuri-bears-for-ukraine

0 replies on “Ryman Helping Ukrainian Children”