Stories from the Field
"Real people. Real communities. Real hope." Witness the transformation your support makes possible.
Connecting Souls
Life-Changing Family Camp for Ukrainian Refugees
At a three-day family camp for displaced Ukrainian families, a young boy named Bohdan challenged everything — and then something unexpected began to shift.
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Reaching 'The One' with the Gospel
Tetiana fled Kharkiv at 72 years old, determined to have nothing to do with religion. Then she met the BridgeUA missionaries who had been displaced just like her.
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The Music of Hope and the Gospel
Room For More traveled to six Ukrainian cities — including Zaporizhzhia, just 20 minutes from the frontlines — bringing original worship music to communities living under constant bombardment.
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Veszprém Community
In the Hungarian city of Veszprém, BridgeUA brought together Ukrainian refugee women and local Hungarian women for an afternoon of crafts, shared meals, and faith.
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Hurt and Hope
More than a year after Russia's invasion, BridgeUA's work across five Hungarian cities has evolved from emergency aid into deep relational ministry.
Read the StorySharon's Refugee Journal
Sharon Markey — a Calvary Chapel missionary who lived in Ukraine for twenty years before the war forced her family to Hungary — shares raw, honest reflections on displacement, faith, and the slow work of finding home again.
Sharon recounts the breakthrough moment when she realized that lowering her language-learning expectations was the key to actually communicating in her new country.
Read MoreWhen Sharon's family evacuated Kyiv, she left behind a beloved pair of rain boots. Replacing them became an unexpected metaphor for learning to thrive after displacement.
Read MoreThree years after evacuating Ukraine, Sharon wrestles with a painful paradox: you can't recover from trauma while the source of that trauma is still ongoing.
Read MoreAfter years of displacement-induced numbness, Sharon notices the crimson maple trees of Budapest for the first time — and realizes how much grief had taken from her ability to see beauty.
Read MoreAfter three years of grief following displacement from Ukraine, Sharon discovers that offering her suffering as worship unlocks the joy she thought the war had permanently taken.
Read MoreDuring a visit to Ukraine, Sharon and her family endure a night of air-raid sirens and missile strikes that hit six cities — including a children's hospital — leaving her without words.
Read MoreWhile sorting through boxes from their Kyiv apartment, Sharon finds pre-dated school absence notes from February 2022 and grapples with what displacement has done to her children.
Read MoreAfter completing the second draft of her memoir, Sharon confronts an uncomfortable truth: displacement has brought unexpected blessings alongside the loss.
Read MoreAn airport advertisement poses a deceptively simple question — is home where you're from or where you're going? — and Sharon traces her answer across two decades and two displacements.
Read MoreSitting in a Budapest coffee house, feeling settled for the first time, Sharon is blindsided by a wave of longing — and discovers it points to something beyond Ukraine.
Read MoreRead Sharon's Story
Sharon T. Markey spent twenty years in Ukraine as a Calvary Chapel missionary before the war forced her family to Hungary. Her memoirs chronicle the joys and heartbreaks of cross-cultural ministry, the chaos of displacement, and the faithfulness of God through it all.
Finding Home
Wrapping my heart around Ukraine
Finding Home Again
Hope survives the war in Ukraine — Foreword by Jeremy Camp
Rooted in Grace
A Seven-Day Devotional
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