“One of the great things about being a Knight,” reflected Supreme Chaplain Archbishop William Lori during his pastoral visit to Ukraine in October 2024, “is that you know a Knight on the other side of the world is supporting you by his prayers [and] in a common sense of mission.”
This deep sense of unity and fraternity, together with charity, permeates every initiative undertaken by the Knights of Columbus to help suffering people in war-torn Ukraine, including the roughly 3,000 Ukrainian Knights and their families who hold onto the hope that their life and livelihood can be rebuilt.
The first Knights in Ukraine joined the Order in the spring of 2012, nearly two years before Russia invaded the Crimean Peninsula and a decade before Russia’s full-scale invasion Feb. 24, 2022. Among the first members were Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk of Kyiv-Halyč, head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, and Archbishop Mieczysław Mokrzycki of Lviv, head of the Latin-rite community in Ukraine.
“We started with the first councils in Lviv and in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, right before the Revolution of Dignity started, right before the war knocked on our door,” noted Archbishop Shevchuk in an August 2018 interview, following the designation of Ukraine as a state council. “I think because of that very vibrant presence of the Knights of Columbus in our country, we were prepared by divine providence.”





