COLORADO SPRINGS—When Whitney Luckett, president and owner of Simko North America, and her husband Marc welcomed Ukrainian refugees into their home, she was just getting started on her mission to help the country's people.
Today, alongside Yana Malyk, a fellow businesswoman and Ukrainian refugee, Luckett is helping to bring power to the war-torn Luhansk oblast, or province, of Ukraine through their non-profit Ukraine Power.
On Feb. 24, 2022, Russia's President Vladimir Putin rattled the world with his unprovoked attack on Ukraine when he invaded Kyiv and Kharkiv.
One year later, Ukraine has suffered over $100 billion and counting worth of damages to its infrastructure across the country as well as the loss of thousands of civilian lives.
According to the Kyiv School of Economics, the total damages to Ukraine's infrastructure reached $108.3 billion by Aug. 2022. And as of Feb. 13 this year, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has recorded 18,955 civilian casualties in the country, which includes 7,199 killed and 11,756 injured.
In the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts alone, the Donbas region of Eastern Ukraine, these figures include 4,189 killed and 5,978 injured.
Today, Luhansk is without power about 90 percent of the time, according to Malyk's local sources, as it is on the frontlines of the war as the easternmost province of the country, just south of Kharkiv on the Russian border.
Millions of Ukrainians have fled the country seeking refuge across Europe, and thousands have come to the U.S.
And of those refugees who have come to the U.S., Malyk and her two daughters, Liza and Ulia, are three of them, aided by a rubber industry businesswoman and her husband who wanted to do more for the people of Ukraine.