
VATICAN (CNS): Following news reports about the war in Ukraine is important, said Michael Cardinal Czerny, the interim president of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, but meeting the victims of that war—the people forced to flee—has a different impact.
“The impact on your eyes when you see [through the media] the bombing and the destruction and the blood and all that” is one of outrage, Cardinal Czerny said. But “when you meet people who are fleeing and who have left everything behind, the impact is on the gut” and triggers compassion.
Pope Francis sent the cardinal to the Hungarian-Ukrainian border in early March to show his closeness to the victims of the war and his appreciation for those helping them.
Speaking from Budapest, Hungary, on March 10, the cardinal said he met a woman from rural Ukraine who was forced to flee, leaving behind all her animals. “I’m not saying she was weeping for her animals, but this has been her life and the life of her family for generations. And now, suddenly, she’s uprooted from that, and she has absolutely nothing.”
The look in her eyes and the sorrow in her voice “lodges in your gut in a physical way,” the cardinal said.
After spending a few hours in Barabás, a border town where the Hungarian government, Caritas Hungary and other charities welcome refugees, Cardinal Czerny was driven across the border to Beregove, Ukraine, to meet with the local Eastern- and Latin-rite Catholic bishops.
What he found instead were the bishops along with representatives of the local Protestant and Jewish communities—all of whom were working together to assist the displaced.
“It was a happy surprise,” he said. “It seemed to be the most natural and normal and necessary thing to do.”
But another evil lurks in the darkness of war, the cardinal said: the danger of human trafficking.
Even if they wanted to, men of fighting age are not allowed to leave Ukraine, so the refugees are mostly women fleeing with their children.
“This is exactly when trafficking goes into high gear, because they have such a large, vulnerable population of young women, young children,” Cardinal Czerny said. “A stranger comes up to you when you are in total need and says, ‘Do you want help?’ and you innocently say yes,” and the consequences can be devastating.
One thing the cardinal said he tried to do on his trip is educate the local Church representatives and volunteers to the danger and how to help.
More than 2.3 million people fled Ukraine since the war began February 24, according to figures compiled on March 9 by the UN Refugee Agency. More than 200,000 of the refugees—Ukrainians as well as foreign students and workers from Africa and Asia—crossed the border into Hungary.
The rapid organisation of assistance, he said, is thanks to the Hungarian government, working with Caritas Hungary and other organisations and hundreds of volunteers.
“The Church people are able to not only distribute sandwiches and cups of tea, but also to point people toward whatever support or services they need,” he said. For example, the government has provided transportation passes, so the refugees can ride the buses and trains for free, including across Hungary to another border crossing where their relatives may be waiting for them.
Cardinal Czerny had also met with Zsolt Semjén, Hungary’s deputy prime minister, on March 9 and encouraged the Hungarian government to continue to widen its assistance to refugees.
“For this to be a real grace,” the cardinal said, “it must be prolonged in time and applied universally. There is no category of person for whom it is justified closing the door and saying, ‘You don’t deserve help’.”
According to the Holy See Press Office, the cardinal is scheduled to arrive in Slovakia on March 16 and will travel to the Ukrainian border in the following days.