In an emotional reunion at SFO, Polina Prokopiak and her 1-year-old son Artern, arrive exhausted after a long journey escaping their beloved country.
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"It's very scary in Ukraine with a lot bombing, I was worried for my son. that's why we came to the U.S.," said Prokopiak speaking through a translator.
Her cousin Evgeniy Vinnicov lives in Castro Valley. He says it took Polina five days to escape Ukraine.
TAKE ACTION: Local and national support for people in Ukraine
Polina documented the tragic scene at the border of Maldova, long lines of refugees stretching more than ten miles.
Minutes earlier, another reunion was happening.
Bohdana Korchak from San Jose was greeting her mom Vira, who arrived in San Francisco from Ukraine with only a small suitcase and is now a refugee.
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"No house, no town, no dog, nothing," said Vira Havryliuk.
Korchak said her mom has been been taking cover for days in her own basement, turned bomb shelter.
VIDEO: As hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians flee country, Bay Area nonprofits prepare for refugees
As hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians flee country, Bay Area nonprofits prepare for refugees
The train station she left from in Ukraine was bombed minutes after her departure.
Vira's message to Russian President Putin: "Putin is a maniac."
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"It was hard to convince my mom to leave, she was scared," said daughter Bohdana Korchak.
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Nearly one million refugees have already fled Ukraine, about the population of San Jose.
These Ukrainian relatives hope to apply for refugee status allowing them to stay in the U.S.