Ukrainians With Cancer Find Refuge In Europe / The Wall Street Journal / 2022
A girl petting a plush unicorn inside Unicorn Clinic in Bocheniec, Poland, on Apr 08, 2022.
At a converted hotel in Poland, children and their families come in to rest. They are cancer patients from Ukraine, where their treatment was interrupted by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Their families spend a few days at the Unicorn Marian Wilemski Clinic in the town of Bocheniec before continuing on to medical centers in western Europe and the U.S. for treatment on solid tumors or blood cancers such as leukemia. More than 600 children and their families have passed through the clinic.
Father and son inside the playroom filled with humanitarian aid at Unicorn Clinic in Bocheniec, Poland, on Apr 08, 2022.
Maria, Danilo and Anna Rudnicki inside the playroom filled with humanitarian aid at Unicorn Clinic in Bocheniec, Poland, on Apr 08, 2022.
Refugees from Ukraine waiting at the Unicorn Clinic in Bocheniec, Poland, on Apr 08, 2022, before boarding the bus headed for the airport.
Masha and Osam at the sports grounds of the Unicorn Clinic in Bocheniec, Poland, on Apr 08, 2022. The clinic is located inside former holiday resort.
Rudnicki family leaving the Unicorn Clinic in Bocheniec, Poland, on Apr 08, 2022.
Refugees from Ukraine sitting on a bus outside the Unicorn Clinic in Bocheniec, Poland, on Apr 08, 2022.
Irina Alanbousi and Julia Hrigoriy saying goodbye in front of Unicorn Clinic in Bocheniec, Poland, on Apr 08, 2022.