Kyiv-based pride organization asks Canadians to open homes to Ukrainian LGBTQ refugees - Action News
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Kyiv-based pride organization asks Canadians to open homes to Ukrainian LGBTQ refugees

Canada has taken in thousands of Ukrainian refugees, but some organizations are still looking for hosts to house more, particularly refugees who identify as LGBTQ.

'I don't think this is stopping anytime soon,' advocate says

Two men, one bald and the other with pink hair, smile as they stand on a snow-covered street.
Bradley Gionet, left, poses with one of the many Ukrainian refugees he's housed since April 2022. (Bradley Gionet)

Simon Fraser University professor Svitlana Matviyenko was in Kyiv on New Year's Eve when Russia fired missiles into the city.

"It was a very strange experience, obviously. And scary in many ways," she told Stephen Quinn, the host of CBC'sThe Early Edition.

She and many others took cover in old subway stationsand listened to the sounds of explosions above.

Next month will mark one year since Russia invaded Ukraine. While many have stayed in the country, refugees continue to flee in search of a safer, more peaceful life. In the first two weeks of the invasion, an estimated three million people fled.

Canada has taken in more than 132,000Ukrainian refugees, butsome organizations are still looking for hosts to house more, particularly refugees who identify as LGBTQ.

Bradley Gionet says he's had about 20 different refugees in and out of his home in Chilliwack, B.C., since April 2022.

He's also helped co-ordinate housing for more than 250 refugees, 75 of whom identified as LGBTQ.

"I don't think this is stopping anytime soon," he said.

"I just keep on keeping on. I keep putting the requests out."

People walk by a damaged school in Kyiv.
Bystanders look at an educational building in Kyiv on Jan. 1, 2023, which was damaged by a missile strike on the previous day during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Genya Savilov/AFP/Getty Images)

KyivPride is now calling on Canadians to open their hometo LGBTQUkrainian refugees, in particular.

"At this time, our organizations are actively relocating the most marginalized of Ukraine's LGBTQcommunity members and have received over 100 applications," their host registration form reads.

"If you are anLGBTQCanadian or a proud ally living in any part of the country, we invite you to assist us with temporary accommodations and/or settlement support for a queer person, couple or family from Ukraine. "

While there is littledata on how many of Ukraine's 41 million citizens are LGBTQ, anIpsos surveysuggests anywhere between three and 10 per cent of people identify as LGBTQ globally.

That would mean potentially anywhere between 1.23 million and 4.1 million Ukrainians identify as LGBTQ.

Gionet, who isn't directly involved with KyivPride but has been helping it find housing, says that while all refugees face struggles such as adapting to a new environment, navigating government bureaucracyand finding a job,LGBTQpeople face additional challenges during resettlement.

"They're coming from a part of the world where they're not accepted," he said.

"It's sort of breaking down that barrier of how do I connect with somebody in Canada that's going to respect me and provide safe space."

"For the first little while, you kind of need somewhere to lay your head."

He said finding people to offer housing for refugees during the early months of the war in Ukraine was relatively easy. But now, the conflict overseas is no longer top of mind.

"People have kind of tuned out."

But, he said, housing is still badly needed, especially for marginalized people.

"We have a very strong support network here as far as helping LGBTQ[refugees], and we've become a little bit of a destination here in the west of Canada.

"I just need houses for people."

With files from The Early Edition and Maya Lach-Aidelbaum