![Ukrainians in Quebec plead for support for their homeland in face of Russian invasion](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6365227.1645827300!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/ukraine-montreal.jpg)
Ukrainians in Quebec plead for support for their homeland in face of Russian invasion
CBC
Watching from afar as Russian shells explode above her Ukrainian hometown of Karkiv, Quebec City resident Olga Grayvoronska Sharpe goes through a roller coaster of emotions.
"I feel despair. I feel anger. I feel all kinds of emotion at the same time, and I hope and plead the international community not to stand by silently," she says.
Sharpe has a message for her loved ones, including her mother and brother, still in Ukraine.
"We are doing the best we can to let the message, let the need of Ukraine be heard here," she says.
Like so many other Ukrainian Quebecers, Sharpe refuses to feel paralyzed in the face of a war 7,000 kilometres away.
A group of demonstrators gathered in front of the Russian consulate in Montreal on Friday, flying Ukrainian flags and holding up signs. There was also an anti-war protest on Thursday in front of McGill University's Roddick Gates.
Katherine Smolynec, head of the Montreal branch of the Ukrainian National Federation, says she is touched by the outpouring of support from Montrealers. One even dropped by the federation to leave a bouquet of yellow roses, she said.
Smolynec said there is a great need for financial support, but it's also important that people urge the Canadian government to do more to intervene against Russia in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine.
"Contact your MP. Write your MP, and phone your MP, and say you support Ukraine, and you want more sanctions and more defensive weapons sent," she said.
"On an individual basis, there are also a number of avenues in which people can contribute financially," said Smolynec. "An important one in Canada is the Canada-Ukraine Foundation."
Lubomyr Luciuk, a Ukrainian-Canadian professor of political geography at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ont., said the people of Ukraine need help.
"What Ukraine keeps on saying is 'help us. Help us now. Help us so that we don't fall, so we don't collapse,'" said Luciuk.
Quebec Premier François Legault reiterated on Friday his pledge to welcome any future Ukrainian refugees to the province. He said his government is looking into ways to become a safe haven.
"Obviously there are Ukrainians who have left Ukraine, and we are looking at neighbouring countries to be able to bring a certain number of them here," Legault said.