Curlers face off to support Lachine's Ukranian community
At the Lachine's Curling Club, a team of teenage Ukrainian refugees slide a curling stone across the ice and sweep it toward their target.
It's their first game of the tournament, and the boys are giving it their best shot. The prize: first place in the Ukraine Cup, a fundraising tournament to raise money for refugee and humanitarian aid, which will be donated to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of St. George in Montreal's Lachine borough.
Stephanie Berger is one of the organizers behind the competition.
After dropping off a car-load of food donations to a Ukrainian refugee — Maryna Kuchr, a mother of two teens — Berger developed a friendship with the woman and suggested she bring her children to curl at the club, free of charge.
It started with two boys and then became five — the number required to form an official curling team — as more Ukrainian mothers wanted to get their kids involved in the sport.
"This is definitely an opportunity for us to keep shining a light on the difficult times that Ukrainian refugees are having here and how we can all help them with resources that we have at our own fingertips," said Berger.
As part of the fundraiser, the mothers of the five boys are preparing Ukrainian specialties for dinner.
But aside from raising money for the church, the goal is also to forge connections between Lachine and the Ukrainian community.
Semen Kuchr had never curled before coming to Canada one year ago. His mother, Maryna, made the move with him, but his father stayed in Ukraine to fight against the Russians.
At first, Kuchr says he wasn't all that excited to curl, but he and his younger brother quickly took a liking to the game after giving it a try.
"It's very cool," he said. "I like it."
And today,