Stay With Ukraine: Direct Aid, Moral Choice, and the Fight to Save Lives
About this Event
Join us for a conversation with Inna and Alexander Adamovich, co-founders of Stay With Ukraine (), a grassroots nonprofit delivering urgent medical supplies and humanitarian aid directly to Ukrainians affected by Russia’s invasion.
Stay With Ukraine focuses on practical, life-saving support: tourniquets, hemostatic dressings, chest seals, IFAKs, stretchers, water purification supplies, and other critical resources for civilians, medics, and defenders in Ukraine. The organization emphasizes direct delivery, with Inna and Alexander personally helping transport supplies and working with trusted partners on the ground to make sure aid reaches the people who need it most.
This event will explore the human story behind that work: how a husband-and-wife team built a direct-aid mission from the United States to Ukraine, why battlefield and emergency medicine remain urgent needs, and what Americans can do now to help Ukraine survive, resist, and recover. The evening will also include a small fundraiser to support Stay With Ukraine’s ongoing deliveries of life-saving supplies.
At each of our events you can expect a warm atmosphere, an ability to network as well as complimentary refreshments.
RSVP is recommended, and donations welcomed.
Each talk is broadcasted live from our auditorium when it starts at 6:00pm EST on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61567824218964
Inna and Alexander Adamovich are the co-founders of Stay With Ukraine, a U.S.-based 501(c)(3) nonprofit delivering medical and humanitarian supplies to Ukrainians affected by Russia’s invasion. Born in the Soviet Union, they met in Moscow in 1988, married later that year, and moved to the United States in 1991. Inna built a career as a sonographer, while Alexander worked as a software developer.
After Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Adamovichs turned their opposition to the war into direct action. Through Stay With Ukraine, they personally help transport life-saving supplies—including tourniquets, trauma-care materials, and other emergency medical aid—to Ukrainian medics, civilians, and defenders. Their work is also deeply personal: Inna has spoken publicly about the rupture the war created with family members and Russian-speaking friends who accepted Kremlin propaganda or supported the invasion.
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