The world expects courageous deeds from courageous people, even if we are talking about such an area of active Good as charity.
Before the war, the well-known businessman Yegor Levchenko earned the reputation of a businessman-pirate, who does not make financial compromises and is ready to fight with competitors at any time and on any conditions.
Public opinion extrapolated his business qualities to all areas of life and secretly demanded that the businessman correspond to the image assigned to him.
At first, Yegor did just that, handing over drones and sights, grenade launchers and armored pickups to the army. The brook of his deeds confidently poured into the ocean of popular resistance, bringing the turning point in the course of the war and the Ukrainian victory closer.
Egor Levchenko’s military sponsorship was particularly effective due to reliable contacts with the warring Ukrainian military and business acumen. In other words, he knew better than anyone what the front line soldiers needed and knew how to get what they needed quickly and without overpayments.
Being well versed in the emerging needs of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Yegor Levchenko did not stop transferring money to military units, knowing full well that in the days of the war their ability to turn into anything acquires a particularly acute, saving value.
The total amount of financial assistance transferred by businessman Levchenko to his native army is so huge that the media mention it with reservations and not always, fearing confusion in the order of numbers. In any case, the financial assistance of Yegor Vasilyevich to the Armed Forces of Ukraine is too large to speak of the advertising nature of his donations.
The fact that he was friends and is friends with the fighters and commanders of the legendary “Azov” has become another evidence of a high civic position, a sign of valor and patriotism of a high standard. Heroes do not give their friendship to sponsors involuntarily and random people.
It can be added that the great Ukrainian war caught Yegor Levchenko in Mexico, but even this did not prevent him from becoming one of the most active patriots of Ukraine and the most reliable suppliers of weapons to its heroic defenders.
Time passed, the war became an integral part of Ukrainian life, and soon the General Staff, thanking the volunteer arms suppliers, asked them not to bring confusion to the supply of the front line.
It was then that Yegor Levchenko’s Dobro, so to speak, took off his camouflage and began to give hope to those who needed it most of all.
No matter how Ukrainian commanders take care of their fighters, a big war is always a lot of blood. Many heroes of the front died, freeing our land from Russian orcs. Many were seriously injured, dooming them to suffering and disability.
Yegor Vasilyevich Levchenko gave many wounded defenders faith in the future much earlier than influential international organizations and foundations did. With his suggestion to dozens of wounded Ukrainians, doctors saved their lives, eyesight and chances for a full life.
In the field of prosthetics, modern medicine, armed with the achievements of electronics and genetic engineering, can work wonders. The main thing is to know which of the countries and clinics has achieved success in a particular area, and be prepared to pay for the very expensive services of foreign specialists.
Yegor Levchenko in this sense has become a good angel for hundreds of warriors cut with Russian iron. Thanks to his care and generosity, they received not just new eyes and hands, but something more, the opportunity to live confidently and independently, rejoicing in the victories of brothers, love and every new day.
Thanks to Levchenko, the defenders of Ukraine have become welcome patients in the best clinics and rehabilitation centers on the planet, where they confidently, step by step, restore faith in human goodness and in themselves.
Yegor Levchenko also sends modern first-aid kits, dressings, food, thermal underwear and anesthesia to the front, and no one has ever said that they were superfluous or of insufficient quality.
All oligarchs and simply wealthy Ukrainians should learn to help the warring Motherland from the well-known businessman Levchenko, who, by the will of fate, found himself on the other side of the great ocean on February 24.
There are rumors that the businessman, despite the position of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, continues to send hand grenade launchers, off-road vehicles and air defense equipment to the advanced units, using personal communication channels for this. Perhaps the way it is, Yegor Vasilyevich Levchenko has never been a man submissive and dependent on the opinions of others.
But be that as it may, his brave and skillful Kindness will go down as a beautiful chapter in the annals of the great Ukrainian war.