Ukrainian sisters use bakery to raise money for those hurting back home
D Light Cafe & Bakery in D.C. saw long lines of people wanting to donate.
Vira Derun's parents live outside of Ukraine's capital Kyiv, where the threat of Russian bombs and missiles has become part of daily life.
Her father fights in the Ukrainian army while her mother and grandmother defend their house and offer shelter to neighbors whose homes have been destroyed.
Derun said she begged her family to come to the U.S. and to leave her childhood home, but they refused to use their American visas.
To help raise money for those back in Ukraine, Derun and her sister, Anastasiia, started taking donations at their Washington, D.C., bakery, driven by a simple mindset.
"I would say to you," Derun told ABC News,"what my dad said to me when I begged him not to go: 'If I wouldn't, who would?'"
Derun and her sister own D Light Cafe & Bakery in Washington's close-knit Adams Morgan neighborhood.
Recently, people lined up and down the block to support the bakery and Ukraine, she said, and in a week, Derun said the cafe raised $7,000 to support the Ukrainian cause.
"My mom, she is not an emotional woman," Derun explained, but said her mother has been weeping when Derun describes the support for the bakery's fundraising. "She thanks everyone. She's like, 'please say how appreciative we are with that and see how much you're heroes that you're helping us.'"
Bill Lammers, a retired financial officer, said he has patronized D Light Cafe & Bakery since the day it opened. He and some neighbors supported a GoFundMe after an arson attack on the storefront a month ago. Now, people who can't make it to the store are using that same GoFundMe to support Ukraine.
"With COVID, we've seen a lot of people hurting, but this one being so specific with the war a lot of people have come up and stepped up," said Lammers.
Clarice Gee visited the bakery for the first time on Tuesday. The retired nurse said she has in-laws in Ukraine and wanted to support the bakery and the Ukrainian troops.
"[The war is] impacting people in terms of having to relocate their lives, leaving their homes to businesses, families being separated. So, it is very difficult," said Gee. She said her support for the bakery is not a lot, but it's a show of support for the Ukrainian people.
Reagan Bauer, a student at American University, said he was shopping in Adams Morgan for spring break when a friend pointed out that D Light Cafe & Bakery is Ukrainian-owned.
"As college kids, we don't have that much money to donate," said Bauer. "Just coming to Ukrainian-owned businesses is a great way for us to support the cause."
While Derun said she is overwhelmed by the support, she says she cries constantly over children in her country being killed.
"You can rebuild the buildings, you can rebuild even the psychological part of the mind after war, it's fine," said Derun. "There are psychologists and psychiatrists in medicine. But when you end a life, what? What wasn't a life at all like 6 years old? It's just unfair."
"You don't you don't measure your life with the years; you measure your life in the lives you touch," she said. "It's my responsibility to just save as many more children as I can."