€1 million in medicine and over 1,000 heaters delivered as Pope Leo XIV responds to bishops’ urgent humanitarian plea
Vatican City / Ukraine
As Ukraine endures its fourth brutal winter of war, Pope Leo XIV has responded decisively to an urgent plea from local bishops by sending a truckload of life-saving medicines and hundreds of electric heaters to the country’s most devastated regions.
The gesture comes amid worsening humanitarian conditions: families displaced, cities shattered by missile strikes, and millions struggling to survive freezing temperatures without reliable electricity or heating.
A ‘humanitarian catastrophe’: Vatican responds
The Vatican’s Dicastery for the Service of Charity confirmed that the Pope personally ordered the shipment after receiving a distressing appeal from Ukrainian bishops describing the situation as a “humanitarian catastrophe.”
The aid includes:
- €1 million worth of essential medicine
- Supplies donated largely through the Banco Farmaceutico ETS Foundation
- Additional medical items requested by hospitals and field clinics
The truck was loaded in Vatican City earlier this week and immediately dispatched toward Ukraine.

Heating help for 800 freezing families
Beyond medicine, the war’s destruction of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure has left entire neighborhoods without heat.
Bishop Pavlo Honcharuk—shepherding one of the most heavily bombed dioceses—made a dramatic appeal on behalf of more than 800 families left with no functioning heating system.
Unable to repair the energy grid quickly, he turned to Cardinal Konrad Krajewski, the Pope’s Almoner, asking for concrete and immediate aid.
This morning, hundreds of oil-filled electric heaters purchased in Italy arrived in Zaporizhzhia.
More than 1,000 units will ultimately be distributed across destroyed neighborhoods and shelters.
“Despite all logistical and operational challenges, the supplies will be delivered quickly across the bombed territories,” Cardinal Krajewski said.
Warmth amid winter destruction
For many Ukrainian families, the heaters mean survival:
women and children sleeping in unheated apartments, families crowding together in makeshift shelters, and elderly residents trapped in cold homes now have a source of warmth.
Local priests described the arrival of the heaters as “a moment of hope in a winter full of darkness.”
A response rooted in prayer
The Pope’s humanitarian action follows his emotional appeal during the Feb. 22 Angelus, in which he remembered:
- The victims of the war
- The “broken families”
- The “indescribable suffering” of civilians
He urged the world to recognize that peace cannot be delayed, calling for renewed prayer so that “the long-awaited gift of peace may shine upon our days.”
“A living Paschal story”
The Vatican’s intervention comes as Church leaders reflect on Ukraine’s suffering as “a living paschal story”—a profound journey through death, destruction, and hope for resurrection.
Amid the devastation, the Pope’s gesture stands as a sign of solidarity, compassion, and unwavering commitment to those enduring the harshest consequences of war.
