Joseph Ressler/Butler Eagle
Alisa Yeremenko looked up from a table outside the school cafeteria. In front of her, dozens of students waited in line to buy yellow-and-blue bracelets, sunflower pins, and magnets. It was part of a fund-raiser at Ryan Gloyer Middle School in Harmony, Pennsylvania. The goal was to raise money for the people of Ukraine.
On February 24, the Russian military invaded the neighboring country in Eastern Europe. During the first month of the war, thousands of Ukrainian civilians and soldiers were killed and many more were wounded. More than 10 million people were forced to leave their homes. As Scholastic News went to press, the future of Ukraine was uncertain.
“It’s just crazy there,” Alisa says. “Everything is bombed.”
To Alisa, Ukraine isn’t just a country in the news—it’s her homeland. The seventh-grader was born in Ukraine and moved to the U.S. in 2020. Many of her friends and family are still overseas, living in danger.
Alisa Yeremenko looked up from a table outside the school cafeteria. In front of her, dozens of students waited in line. They were there to buy yellow-and-blue bracelets, sunflower pins, and magnets. It was part of a fund-raiser at Ryan Gloyer Middle School. That's in Harmony, Pennsylvania. The goal was to raise money for the people of Ukraine.
On February 24, the Russian military invaded the neighboring country in Eastern Europe. During the first month of the war, thousands of Ukrainian civilians and soldiers were killed. Many more were wounded. More than 10 million people were forced to leave their homes. As Scholastic News went to press, the future of Ukraine was uncertain.
“It’s just crazy there,” Alisa says. “Everything is bombed.”
To Alisa, Ukraine isn’t just a country in the news. It’s her homeland. The seventh-grader was born in Ukraine. She moved to the U.S. in 2020. Many of her friends and family are still overseas, living in danger.