The American Reporter
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
  • Login
  • World
  • National
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Technology
No Result
View All Result
  • World
  • National
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Technology
No Result
View All Result
The American Reporter
No Result
View All Result

Stan Polovets and the Genesis Prize Foundation Mark Four Years of War in Ukraine

Humanitarian Work Funded By the Foundation in 2023 Still Continues

Jennifer Ross by Jennifer Ross
May 12, 2026
in World
Reading Time: 10 mins read
Stan Polovets and the Genesis Prize Foundation Mark Four Years of War in Ukraine

Over four years ago, on Feb. 24, 2022, Russian forces crossed into Ukraine, launching what has become the largest armed conflict on European soil since World War II. A relentless humanitarian catastrophe followed: millions displaced, cities reduced to rubble, and an entire generation of Ukrainians forced to rebuild their lives from scratch, many of them far from home. And as the war continues to rage, Stan Polovets, co-founder and chairman of The Genesis Prize Foundation (GPF), continues to make the case that global attention and sustained support for Ukraine’s civilian population cannot afford to waver.

The war’s consequences have long surpassed any neat military or geopolitical framing. The United Nations estimates that more than six million Ukrainians remain displaced abroad, with millions more internally displaced within the country. Civilian infrastructure, including power grids, hospitals, and water systems, has been systematically targeted. The psychological toll on survivors, including children who have spent formative years living under the threat of missile strikes, will take decades to fully reckon with. These are not abstract statistics to the network of Jewish activists and NGOs that The Genesis Prize Foundation has been supporting and amplifying.

RELATED POSTS

Holly DeNeve: Why Composure in the Courtroom Can Change a Child’s Future

How Traceability Became the New Standard in Responsible Seafood

From Anniversary to Action: The Genesis Prize’s Role

Co-Founders of the Genesis Prize Natan Sharansky and Stan Polovets convened a gathering at the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation in Tel Aviv in February 2025 marking the third anniversary of the invasion. The event was not merely ceremonial. More than 40 representatives from 21 Genesis grantee organizations participated, either in person or via video, to share field reports, assess shifting humanitarian needs, and confront a particularly uncertain political moment: the curtailment of USAID funding and the prospect of a peace process driven more by external political pressure than by the needs of Ukraine’s population.

That gathering reflected how The Genesis Prize Foundation has chosen to operate throughout the conflict. Rather than treating Ukraine as a single campaign or a news cycle to which to respond, the foundation sees it as an issue that demands ongoing focus, relationships with frontline organizations, and the willingness to focus on the issue even when the world’s attention has moved elsewhere.

“From the outset of the war, Jewish activists and NGOs, many from Israel, immediately sprang into action, providing assistance to those in dire need,” Polovets said at the 2025 commemoration. “We are proud to honor these organizations and to support their work in helping the Ukrainian people in their quest to live freely in security and peace.”

The 2023 Honorees: A Network of Organizations Still Working

The foundation’s decision to structure its 2023 Genesis Prize around Ukraine rather than an individual laureate was, at the time, a break from a decade of tradition. It was also a deliberate acknowledgment of the scale of the collective response that had emerged across the Jewish world since February 2022. The organizations recognized as 2023 Genesis Prize honorees, including United Hatzalah, The Jewish Agency for Israel, IsraAID, HIAS Israel, Hillel CASE, NATAL, the JCC Association of North America, BlueCheck Ukraine, Project Kesher, World Jewish Relief, and others, were chosen precisely because they were not waiting for institutional direction. They were already there.

Actor and activist Liev Schreiber, who co-founded BlueCheck Ukraine to vet and fund humanitarian aid initiatives, joined last year’s commemoration via video from New York. His continued participation in the foundation’s programming is emblematic of the kind of long-term engagement Stan Polovets has sought to cultivate. The goal has never been to generate a single burst of fundraising attention, but to build durable relationships between donors, civil society organizations, and the communities they serve.

Eli Beer, founder and president of United Hatzalah, is appreciative. “We are deeply grateful to The Genesis Prize Foundation for their leadership and generous funding,” Beer said at last year’s event. “With the support of GPF and others, we are able to focus our attention on delivering aid to those who need it most.”

Over the past three years, these organizations have collectively delivered medical care, psychological support, food assistance, resettlement services, and trauma therapy to hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians. For a conflict that has remained largely out of Western headlines for extended stretches, their persistence has been extraordinary.

The Broader Stakes: Jewish Identity and the Meaning of Solidarity

Natan Sharansky, who was born in Donetsk, the Ukrainian city annexed by Russia in September 2022, has framed the foundation’s engagement with Ukraine as inseparable from Jewish values. “International support is critical to making sure Ukraine prevails in this fight,” he stated at the 2025 anniversary event. “It is also critical for Jews to continue contributing to this effort so that we remain true to our foundational values of standing up for freedom, human dignity, and justice.”

“We designed the Genesis Prize to honor not just professional achievement, but the application of Jewish values to the challenges of the broader world,” said Stan Polovets. “Ukraine has become one of the defining tests of that principle.”

The connection between Jewish identity and solidarity with Ukraine has also taken on new significance in the context of rising antisemitism and challenges facing diaspora Jewish communities globally. The foundation’s sustained focus on Ukraine reflects a conviction that Jewish communal institutions have both the obligation and the capacity to act as humanitarian actors on the world stage, for Jewish populations and for all people whose dignity and safety are threatened.

A Philanthropic Model Built for Moments Like This

Understanding what makes The Genesis Prize Foundation’s Ukraine engagement possible requires understanding how the foundation’s philanthropic model works. Each year, the $1 million Genesis Prize is typically awarded to an individual and the laureate directs those funds to causes of their choosing, often attracting additional matching donations that multiply the impact significantly. The Genesis Prize Foundation’s philanthropic approach has, over more than a decade, leveraged more than $50 million for charitable initiatives across 30 countries.

“It is the only Jewish organization awarding an annual $1 million to individuals who do not take the money but turn around and invest it back into the community, often doubling or tripling the contribution through matching donations,” Polovets has explained. That model has allowed the foundation to remain nimble, channeling resources toward needs that shift with global circumstances. Ukraine is a vivid illustration: when the invasion began, the foundation was able to pivot quickly, and it has remained committed to the cause as the conflict enters its fourth year.

That agility matters. Humanitarian crises do not follow news cycles, and donor fatigue is a well-documented phenomenon that affects even the most devastating ongoing conflicts. The Genesis Prize Foundation’s commitment to remembering Ukraine year after year, convening organizations, maintaining relationships, and directing public attention, functions as a counterweight to the tendency of the broader philanthropic world to move on.

Looking at Year Four

As the war entered its fourth year, the humanitarian picture remained grim. Reconstruction costs are estimated in the hundreds of billions of dollars. The mental health infrastructure needed to support survivors, particularly children, barely exists. Resettlement programs for displaced Ukrainians are straining the capacity of host countries. And the geopolitical framework that will govern any eventual peace process remains deeply unclear, with significant implications for the millions of Ukrainians still waiting to go home.

Stan Polovets does not suggest that The Genesis Prize Foundation can solve these problems. What he has argued, consistently and with conviction, is that Jewish funders and organizations have a responsibility to show up: to bear witness, to provide resources, and to sustain interest when others grow weary. The organizations recognized in 2023 are still working on the ground in Ukraine. The foundation is still convening them. And four years after Russia’s invasion, that sustained commitment stands as a meaningful response to a crisis that has tested the conscience of the entire international community.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Federal Oil Lease Auctions Heat Up in Montana and North Dakota, with Phoenix Energy Securing Key Parcels

Next Post

An Exclusive Interview with Velangani Divya Vardhan Kumar Bandi on Building Scalable AI Systems That Actually Work

Jennifer Ross

Jennifer Ross

Jennifer has been a part of the journey ever since The American Reporter started. As a strong learner and passionate writer, she contributes her editing skills for the news agency. She also jots down intellectual pieces from health category.

Related Posts

Bauman Law –  How a California firm Became the Firm of Choice

Holly DeNeve: Why Composure in the Courtroom Can Change a Child’s Future

by Jennifer Ross
May 30, 2026
0

Custody hearings can be one of the most challenging experiences for any family. The way parents conduct themselves, both inside...

How Traceability Became the New Standard in Responsible Seafood

How Traceability Became the New Standard in Responsible Seafood

by Richard Brown
May 8, 2026
0

For decades, conversations surrounding premium seafood focused almost exclusively on quality, rarity, and culinary experience. In fine dining environments, Pacific...

Robert Kasirer’s Vision for a Unified Jewish Future: Building the Digital Hub for Global Jewish Events

Robert Kasirer’s Vision for a Unified Jewish Future: Building the Digital Hub for Global Jewish Events

by Jennifer Ross
May 1, 2026
0

Jewish communities around the world have no shortage of events, learning opportunities, and cultural gatherings. Sadly, access to these communal...

Technology Crosses Boundaries and Breaks through Barriers, with SAVOLAB shining at THE MAGIC X Global Embodied Intelligence Summit

Technology Crosses Boundaries and Breaks through Barriers, with SAVOLAB shining at THE MAGIC X Global Embodied Intelligence Summit

by Kyle Matthews
April 30, 2026
0

THE MAGIC X Global Embodied Intelligence Innovation Summit recently kicked off in the United States. The summit brought together top...

Wealthy Families Are the Primary Target of AI-Powered Financial Fraud. Their Advisors Are the Last Line of Defense

Wealthy Families Are the Primary Target of AI-Powered Financial Fraud. Their Advisors Are the Last Line of Defense

by Jennifer Ross
April 28, 2026
0

In February 2026, the U.S. Department of the Treasury released a new AI Risk Management Framework specifically for financial institutions....

Next Post
An Exclusive Interview with Velangani Divya Vardhan Kumar Bandi on Building Scalable AI Systems That Actually Work

An Exclusive Interview with Velangani Divya Vardhan Kumar Bandi on Building Scalable AI Systems That Actually Work

How to Write an Honest Hair Product Review

How to Write an Honest Hair Product Review

Latest News

Tec-Do Integrates Seedance 2.0 into Navos to Empower Global Video Marketing

Tec-Do Integrates Seedance 2.0 into Navos to Empower Global Video Marketing

May 30, 2026

Holly DeNeve: Why Composure in the Courtroom Can Change a Child’s Future

May 30, 2026

Gregory Serdahl: Leading Mission-Driven Organizations and Meeting the Needs of Underserved Communities

May 30, 2026

Why Davis Householder Believes Deal Structure Matters More Than Headline Price

May 27, 2026

Expert On: Do Methylfolate Supplements Improve Health?

May 27, 2026

OMARA Brings a Modern Approach to Gut Health and Daily Wellness

May 27, 2026

ATMInvestors.com Bets Big on America’s Cash Economy With Massive Multi-Million Dollar Acquisition Push

May 27, 2026

Michael Piri is Rethinking “Good Outcomes” in Immigration and Injury Cases

May 27, 2026

Why Ceramic Balls Are Quietly Replacing Steel in High-Performance Bearings

May 26, 2026

Founder of Dovetail Software Responds to Australia’s CGT Overhaul

May 24, 2026

From Research to Reality: The Rise of Targeted Treatments for Blood Cancers

May 23, 2026

How Moving Brokers Compare To Moving Companies? Find Out What Most People Get Wrong

May 22, 2026
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Use of Cookies

© 2019 - The American Reporter

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Use of Cookies

© 2019 - The American Reporter

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.