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Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the BirdLife family, its global partners and many of our supporters, have stepped up to make financial resources available to support the Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds (USPB), our Ukrainian BirdLife partner.

The Polish Society for the Protection of Birds (OTOP), BirdLife’s partner in Poland, is already offering an immediate welcome to USPB team members and their family members fleeing the war zone. Other regional partners have also opened their arms to provide housing, food, and maintenance support. BirdLife’s emergency appeal resources are designed to support these efforts in a firm commitment to preserve and ensure the future invaluable conservation capacity of our Partners.

While the humanitarian and aid community clearly lead international efforts to provide support, we believe there is a specific role and need for BirdLife to provide support for the affected conservation community. We are determined that beyond the immediate crisis, we enable them to hit the ground running to restore nature and rebuild their proven capacity to do so as effectively as they have.

BirdLife has previously enabled this type of solidarity spending for its conservation Partners with efforts that go back to the Syrian crisis and COVID relief among many others.

“Hopefully these nightmares and daymares will end very soon and we will watch sky not awaiting bombs and rockets, but only watching migrating birds.” 

Oleg Dudkin, CEO – Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds (USPB), our Ukrainian BirdLife partner.

Additionally, as many of you know, BirdLife Belarus (APB), our Belarusian partner, was recently dissolved by the government.

BirdLife thanks its many Partners and supporters who wrote letters to the Belarussian government on behalf of APB. These letters WERE heard if not heeded. 

We are working to preserve some operating maneuverability for our APB colleagues going forward to continue their incredible work in another form. In this still fluid and vulnerable environment, we will do everything possible to enable and support that. 

Thank you for helping us help the conservation community of Ukraine and Belarus so we can continue to protect people and nature now and in the long run by donating here.

“The judge read, but did not include in the case, 51 letters of support from various organizations (mainly from BLI partners), including three from Belarusian state organizations (one from the Ministry of forestry). Tears rolled in those present, and the judge was astonished with letters.” 

Alexandre Vitchenvski, CEO of APB, our now dissolved Partner in Belarus

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Statement by former BirdLife CEO Patricia Zurita

“We have all been shocked to the core and angered by the brutal invasion of free Ukraine by the Russian state.  Our thoughts are with all caught up in the conflict in Ukraine including those who work for and with our partner the Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds. As a global organisation, we have been grappling with this and other threats we and our partners face as we battle to save nature. As Ariel Brunner, who is Senior Head of Policy for our European & Central Asian division writes so beautifully below,  to have any chance of tackling the nature and climate emergency we need peaceful cooperation that thrives on diversity, the rule of law, a healthy civil society, and a free press.  All of this is at stake.  This is why we #StandWithUkraine and demand the Russian leader #StoptheWar”.  

Humanity at the Abyss

I grew up in a region ravaged by ethnic and religious conflicts and have chosen to dedicate my life to saving nature from humanity’s over reach, and saving humanity from its own self destructive war on nature. I work for an organisation that prides itself for its neutrality and its ability to bring together grassroots organisations across borders, cultures and sometimes violent political divides. BirdLife doesn’t “do politics”, but it speaks up for the voiceless natural world. 

I also come from a family ravaged by the violence that ethno-nationalism and militaristic ideologies have brought to Europe in the past century. I grew up assuming that those evil spirits had been banished. I thought they might linger in corners of society and in some unfortunate regions, but I felt humanity overall had learned its lesson and moved on. But during the last two decades I have watched with horror as the old monsters re-emerged from their swamps and took a new lease on life. All over the world, democracy, the rule of law, a free press, freedom of association and human rights have been under renewed assault. Demagogues have been harnessing fear of the other. They have been undermining truth, sowing discord and demolishing the foundations of peaceful coexistence, inside and between countries. The violent aggression against Ukraine seems to me like a turning point. The aggressor is a regime that has all but liquidated civil society and has made unprecedented investments in undermining truth and people’s trust in facts and institutions. Many of our most basic democratic assumptions, values and practices are under unprecedented assault.

Science tells us that humanity is on the edge of an ecological abyss. It tells us that we can still save ourselves and the natural world we love and depend on, but that time is running out. But science, and indeed facts, are increasingly under attack in almost every country. Our efforts to address the crisis depend on the freedom to discuss it and on a healthy civil society ecosystem: NGOs, free media, accountable politicians, scientists that can speak openly. But civil society is being shut down in one country after another. Some of our own Partners are being closed down on trumped up charges, or prevented from carrying their work out in more subtle ways. Ultimately, humanity living in peace with the rest of the biosphere requires humanity to live in peace with itself, and to voluntarily submit to a complex set of rules that guarantee an equitable and wise management of fragile global ecosystems. But more and more governments see peace and the rule of law as expendable the moment they block their ambitions.  

This presents us with an unprecedented dilemma. A nature conservation organisation can and must stay neutral in disputes between countries, political factions, ideologies, ethnic groups or religions. But can we stay neutral in the face of the systematic destruction of civil society? We cannot even exist, let alone pursue our mission if totalitarianism wins. Can we stay neutral in the face of systems that deny the existence of objective facts, let alone scientific evidence? If facts are just opinions, on what basis are we arguing for deep changes to human behaviour and economy? Can we stay neutral when even the idea of a rules based society is being challenged and violence is offered as a viable alternative? Can there be an ecologically balanced society that is not rule based? Can we argue for an end of violence against nature if violence between humans is again accepted?

These are hard questions. All the harder for an inclusive and deeply diverse network that includes people of so many origins, orientations, cultures and conditions. Our democratically agreed policies require us to stay out of “politics”, but pursuing our mission is eminently political. It is about how we run our one global, and our many local “polis”, the city, the public space, society. It cannot be done in the absence of at least some elements of those foundational principles: science and facts, a rules based society that is open and tolerant of diversity and peaceful cooperation. When these are attacked, we cannot stay neutral. We must speak up. We need to call on women and men of good will, whoever and wherever they are, to react before it’s too late. We have our world to lose.

Lead image designed by Natalia Alimova

“I work for an organisation that prides itself for its neutrality and its ability to bring together grassroots organisations across borders, cultures and sometimes violent political divides. BirdLife doesn’t “do politics”, but it speaks up for the voiceless natural world.”

Ariel Brunner, Senior Head of Policy, BirdLife Europe & Central Asia

from Another Mother for Peace, 1967
“The UN Charter has been challenged in the past, but it has stood firm on the side of peace, security, development, justice, international law & human rights. The international community must do everything in its power so that these values prevail in Ukraine & for all humanity.”

António Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations

“This wonderful Ukrainian dove for Peace, above, was designed by Moscow-born designer Natasha Alimova to support Ukraine during the Maidan revolution of 2014. Inspired by the Ukrainian Trident coat of arms, she made it freely available to all. Our Albanian friends at the Albanian Ornithological Society resurrected it and shared it with us.”

Christopher Sands, Global Director of Communications


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The grim and tragic news from Ukraine has shocked the entire planet.

War is the most urgent and immediate threat created and faced by man, and our hearts fill with awe for the courage of all Ukrainians. We demand political leaders put a stop to this outrageous tragedy.

USPB – Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Birds

The nightingale has long been invoked in Ukrainian culture as “a creator of sweet sounds, a builder of homes, and a harbinger of spring. In Ukrainian the word for nightingale, sсоловейко – soloveiko,  is a term of personal endearment.” The nightingale is an icon of Ukraine.

Taras Hryhorovych Shevchenko (1814 – 1861), also known as Kobzar Taras, or simply Kobzar (kobzars are bards in Ukrainian culture), is a famous Ukrainian poet, writer and artist, who in 1847, the year he wrote the poem below,  was convicted for supporting the independence of Ukraine, writing poems in the Ukrainian language, and ridiculing members of the Russian Imperial House.

 “Садок вишневий коло хати” 

A cherry orchard by the house.
Above the cherries beetles hum.
The plowmen plow the fertile ground
And girls sing songs as they pass by.
It’s evening—mother calls them home.

A family sups by the house.
A star shines in the evening chill.
A daughter serves the evening meal.
Time to give lessons—mother tries,
But can’t. She blames the nightingale.

It’s getting dark, and by the house,
A mother lays her young to sleep;
Beside them she too fell asleep.
All now went still, and just the girls
And nightingale their vigil keep.

Taras Shevchenko; 1847

photo by Margaret Bobb

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Thank you for your support, we are committed to protecting your personal information and privacy. For more information on how we use your data, please see our Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe from emails at any time by using the link in the footer of any email from us.

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