He Was Going to Serve: Remembering Dmytro Panychuk
Dmytro Panychuk was a husband, father, and a servant in his church who knew how to feed people-both with food and steady words of faith. When war came to Vorzel, Ukraine, he turned his kitchen into a ministry of survival, sheltering 35 people. On March 3, 2022, Dmytro was killed by Russian forces while carrying…
A Bridge in Nazareth: How a Single Food Package Reached an Entire Family in Israel
The lifeline arrived as a box of groceries. It is the kind of detail that can be easy to overlook-a casual gesture in a world often defined by its divisions. But for one family in Nazareth, that single food package became a bridge, proving that even amid profound hostility, the wall of division can be…
A Brother Who Could Not Walk Past: Remembering Viktor Maniushkin
Remembering Viktor Maniushkin, a young Ukrainian believer killed by rockets in Mariupol while running to save his neighbors’ burning home. “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.” – John 15:13 January 19, 1999 – March 10, 2022 Viktor Maniushkin was 23 years old. He was killed…
The Pastor Who Stayed Close: Remembering Leonid Skumatov
Pastor Leonid Skumatov stayed in the frontline city of Myrnohrad to serve the elderly and wounded. He was killed by a Russian drone on September 20, 2025. “He is not the God of the dead, but of the living, for all live to Him.” – Luke 20:38 By September 2025, Myrnohrad was living in the…
“I Felt As If I Were in Paradise”: How a Summer Camp in Central Asia Pulled a Young Man Back From the Edge
Born with severe cerebral palsy and abandoned by his parents, Ruslan arrived at camp planning to end his life. He left knowing a Father who would never leave. “He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” – Psalm 147:3 When Ruslan* was three years old, his parents looked at the son they had been…
From Cast Out to Sent Out: How a Central Asian Seamstress Is Threading the Gospel Through Her Community
Cast out by her family for her faith, Fatima returned with a transformed heart. Discover how this Central Asian seamstress is using her sewing machine as a powerful tool for gospel ministry. “And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds.” – Hebrews 10:24 In 2018, a young…
Twelve People Groups, Twelve Months: A New Prayer Movement Rises Among Azerbaijan’s Unreached
On April 25, 2026, a new prayer movement was launched in Baku, Azerbaijan, uniting over 70 Christian leaders to reach the country’s 100 distinct ethnic groups. Through the “Twelve People Groups, Twelve Months” initiative, Mission Eurasia is mobilizing believers to bridge cultural and linguistic gaps with the gospel. “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers…
Story of Nikita: A Ukrainian Boy’s Dream in a Frontline Village
Growing Up in the Shadow of War Nikita is nine years old, and he lives in the small Ukrainian village of Mykhailivka, where the war is not something you see on the news but something you feel in everyday life. Here, the echoes of explosions are often heard in the distance, evenings pass without electricity…
Story of Eva
Eva Korniychuk lives in the small Ukrainian town of Korosten. Since the first days of the war, her father has been serving in the army. For a long time now, there has been no such thing as “peaceful time” in Eva’s life. Every morning she wakes up with the same prayer-for her father, for his…
Roma’s Story: A Child’s Heart Open to God
Recently, a children’s Bible camp was held at the Reimer Center in Zaporizhzhia, a city just 30 kilometers from the front line of war in Ukraine. In a place where the echoes of shelling are heard daily, the camp became a refuge of joy, games, and friendship for boys and girls longing to escape the…