Precise and validated delivery to ship aid to Ukraine.

Tulcea Humanitarian Logistics Hub

Accomplishments

Building Strong Partnerships and Alliances

The Tulcea Humanitarian Logistics Hub is the #1 Romanian Hub shipping Humanitarian Aid to Ukraine.

While we can ship to nearly any unoccupied city, our strength is shipping to the Southwestern and Eastern Cities.   We can ship up to 50 trucks a week and can scale easily to 100 with a bit of notice.

World Class Logistics Hub

Turned an old Manufacturing building into a World Class Logistics Hub Delivering 99.9% of shipments and Inventory Accuracy of 99.9%.

Develop Trusted Network of NGOs

Developed a trusted network of NGOs across Southern and Eastern Ukraine and shipped to some of the hardest hit and hardest to reach cities

Meals

Tulcea Hub

Over 400 Trucks of Aid to Ukraine

Shipped over 400 Trucks of Aid to Ukraine to nearly 50 different NGOs, charities or governmental agencies.

Tons of Other Aid

Tons of Medicine and Medical Equipment

$1M in Insulin and Supplies

Tons of Hygiene

Tulcea Hub

The Foundation team arrived in Tulcea, Romania in March 2022, with the help of members of US Congress and the Romanian Government to help all NGOs and donors deliver Humanitarian Aid to the hardest-to-reach and strategically important regions of Ukraine.

Operational elements have been on the ground, inside Ukraine since April 2022, with a presence extending from Kharkiv to Kherson.

The Foundation team arrived in Tulcea, Romania in March 2022, with the help of members of US Congress and the Romanian Government to help all NGOs and donors deliver Humanitarian Aid to the hardest-to-reach and strategically important regions of Ukraine.

Operational elements have been on the ground, inside Ukraine since April 2022, with a presence extending from Kharkiv to Kherson.

The Foundation team arrived in Tulcea, Romania in March 2022, with the help of members of U.S. Congress and the Romanian Government to help all NGOs and donors deliver Humanitarian Aid to the hardest-to-reach and strategically important regions of Ukraine.

Operational elements have been on the ground, inside Ukraine since April 2022, with a presence extending from Kharkiv to Kherson.

The Foundation team arrived in Tulcea, Romania in March 2022, with the help of members of U.S. Congress and the Romanian Government to help all NGOs and donors deliver Humanitarian Aid to the hardest-to-reach and strategically important regions of Ukraine.

Operational elements have been on the ground, inside Ukraine since April 2022, with a presence extending from Kharkiv to Kherson.

The Foundation team arrived in Tulcea, Romania in March 2022, with the help of members of U.S. Congress and the Romanian Government to help all NGOs and donors deliver Humanitarian Aid to the hardest-to-reach and strategically important regions of Ukraine.

Operational elements have been on the ground, inside Ukraine since April 2022, with a presence extending from Kharkiv to Kherson.

From serving meals at the border and resettling refugees, this volunteer group from Tulcea and ACoR, took an old manufacturing plant, turned it into A warehouse, started receiving aid from all over Europe and shipping it to Ukraine.

Take Heart.

This little girl was on the 8th floor of her apartment building in Zaporizhzhia when a rocket hit the 6th floor. Her building was no longer safe to inhabit and with little resources her mother turned to the local government to assist with safe passage to temporary refuge.

Tragically, city-center shelters are overburdened and are daily filled with mothers and kids as Russian bombardments leave them homeless.

RTWF is proud to work alongside our Ukrainian counterparts to fill gaps and assist in their work. This image was taken after we shepherded her and her furry best friend 18 hours to shelter and support.

“Volunteers like Pastor Khomiak are the main source of assistance to the hundreds of thousands of displaced persons passing through Zaporizhzhya. But every day, the city-center shelter fills up with mothers and kids made homeless by Russian bombardment. “This morning I felt completely lost for the first time in seven months. The major transport company helping us refused to work under the missile attacks,” a volunteer worker named Natalia Aradlyanova told me on Monday, as she tried to cater to a couple of toddlers. “I have to move at least 36 children. They are very small and terribly stressed.”


Help came instead from a U.S. nonprofit, the Romulus T. Weatherman Foundation, which was working to evacuate children from areas now under Russian bombardment. “No child should ever have to live with a threat of bombing, genocide, and a literal nuclear meltdown,” a co-founder, Andrew Duncan, told me from the foundation’s base in Poland on Wednesday. “It is time for the West to do the honorable thing and protect the children of Ukraine.”

 

One Ukrainian City in the Way of Putin’s New Total War

Anna Nemtsova, Oct. 14, 2022

We do the work because we love the work.

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