Demonstrators gathered in front of the federal building in Montpelier to protest the Russian invasion of Ukraine on Tuesday, March 1, 2022. Photo by Mike Dougherty/VTDigger

Larissa and Jim Haas bake bread in their wood-fired oven โ€” focaccia and sourdough and earthy rye.

The owners of Rise Up Bakery in Barre, the couple met in Ukraine and started making bread there in Larissaโ€™s home. Since 2018, Larissa and Jim have sold fresh bread in Vermont from a window of the brick bakery, attracting regulars like Sonya Spaulding, who buys her weekโ€™s loaves every Thursday.

Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and knowing the Haasesโ€™ Ukrainian roots, Spaulding asked how she could help. 

Larissa and Spaulding decided on a fundraiser.

โ€œWeโ€™ll raise money and go buy the things that are really essential for people,โ€ Spaulding said.

Started five days ago, the Gofundme has already raised over $6,200. Larissa wants to use the money to buy clothes, food and first aid materials, distributing them through her connections in Ukraine.ย 

Across the state, Vermonters are figuring out ways to support Ukraine as Russia continues to invade.

โ€œPeople know us, and they trust us,โ€ Larissa said of her customers. โ€œIt was a heartwarming response from the community.โ€

When the invasion began, Larissa scrambled to figure out where family members were, and whether they were safe.

โ€œI was first very busy trying to understand where my mother was. And she’s in Poland at the moment; she fled,โ€ she said. 

Larissa called it a โ€œstroke of luckโ€ that her son happened to be out of the country when the invasion began. 

โ€œItโ€™s just too stressful and difficult,โ€ she said. โ€œJim and I, weโ€™re just working together. Everything we do is just the two of us.โ€

Dozens of people gathered on State Street in Montpelier, outside the post office, on March 8 to protest Russia’s attack on Ukraine. Photo by Riley Robinson/VTDigger

The aid menu

To the south, in the shadow of Mount Ascutney, the folks at Brownsville Butcher and Pantry are using food to build empathy and raise money for Ukraine. 

โ€œThe Ukrainian crisis has impacted our lives in many ways emotionally, and some of us have family connections to the region,โ€ said owner and chef Peter Varkonyi.

Throughout the pandemic, the grocery and cafe has hosted โ€œsupper clubs,โ€ themed takeout meals to support a local charity or cause. 

This Saturday, $35 of each $65 two-person meal will go to the World Central Kitchen, a nonprofit providing meals to Ukrainians.  

Varkonyi, who is Hungarian, and the shopโ€™s baker, who is Polish and Russian, and a Ukrainian community member devised a Ukrainian-themed menu for the fundraiser.

โ€œWhat we identified was that all of us cook the same things; we just kind of call them different names,โ€ Varkonyi said.

The menu includes banosh, a corn porridge with pork cracklings; holubtsi, which is buckwheat and rice-filled cabbage leaves braised in tomato and dill; and bigos, a smoked beet, pork sausage and sauerkraut stew with potato and caraway-filled varenyky dumplings among other offerings.

โ€œWe try our best in our own little way, and as insignificant at times as we feel, to try and be respectful of each other and in the food that we make,โ€ Varkonyi said.

Community effort

In nearby Ludlow, the Rotary Club has organized a similar food-based fundraiser.

George Thomson, working with the United Church in Ludlow as well as the Rotary Club, is helping coordinate a $15 lasagna dinner set for March 19 to raise money for Ukraine. 

Local businesses quickly rallied to donate time and food to support the effort, Thomson said. 

Black River Produce will donate produce, students at River Valley Technical Center will bake bread, Vermont Family Farms in North Springfield is donating meat, and the Okemo Valley Womenโ€™s Club is making dessert, Thomson said. 

โ€œWhat can we do? We want to do something, but don’t know what to do. And so, we came up with this idea,โ€ Thomson said.

The Rotary Club plans to donate the proceeds from the event to Polish rotary clubs organizing aid to Ukrainian refugees. 

Magic Mountain raised nearly $10,000 over the March 4-6 weekend to support Ukrainians. The ski patrol dyed snow to resemble Ukraineโ€™s flag. Photo courtesy Magic Mountain

On the mountain

Although warming temperatures are quickly ending the ski season, Magic Mountain in Londonderry donated $10 from every lift ticket sold last weekend to support Ukraine.

โ€œWeโ€™ve raised close to $10,000, and so that check will be going to Save the Children,โ€ said Geoff Hatheway, president of the mountain. 

The nonprofit Save the Children is working to provide food, water and other aid to families in Ukraine. 

Hatheway said the mountain wanted to do what it could to help those affected by the Russian war before the ski season came to a close and Magic Mountain had fewer visitors.

โ€œIt hasn’t been, you know, a blockbuster winter,โ€ he said. โ€œThis was just a small part of being responsible citizens of the world.

โ€œWeโ€™re not afraid to speak out and do something on a, maybe a local, small scale, but something that is important globally.โ€

Before the mountain opened Saturday, the ski patrol dyed sections of snow blue and yellow โ€” the colors of the Ukrainian flag. 

Body armor

Meanwhile, Vermont State Police announced this week that law enforcement agencies would donate body armor and military vests to Ukraine while also soliciting donations of similar items from the public. 

โ€œThe vests will be collected throughout the state and packaged for shipment to Ukraine,โ€ state police wrote in a press release Wednesday.

VTDigger's statehouse bureau chief.