Helping Ukraine and Beyond
April 11, 2022
To our Stony Brook community,
Part of what defines Stony Brook University as a great institution is its culture
                     of thought and care. As president, I am proud of how our faculty, staff, and students
                     collaborate in our scholarship and in our research. I appreciate how everyone in our
                     community has the opportunity to advocate strongly for their beliefs. And I am grateful
                     for how we all, in times of crisis, are in service to those in need. It is emblematic
                     of how we foster diversity and inclusion, making it foundational to our work and how
                     we look after each member of our community, including our international scholars and
                     students.
We are horrified daily by the brutal atrocities committed by the Russian military
                     in Ukraine. It has been particularly painful for those whose friends and families
                     are deeply impacted, and for all of us who are seeing the Ukrainian people both resist
                     and suffer. It has spurred action on our campus. It catalyzed people to reach out
                     and help those impacted by the ongoing war, and it pushed our students, faculty, and
                     staff to educate themselves on what this current international conflict means for
                     the world.
When Russia invaded Ukraine, the Student Affairs Student Support Team immediately reached out to Stony Brook’s Ukrainian students to offer assistance and
                     inform them of available resources. These resources include encouraging students from
                     Ukraine to apply for an extension of payment deadlines through the Fall 2022 semester.
                     In addition, leaders with the Intensive English Center and The Program in Writing
                     and Rhetoric are coordinating efforts to offer help and training for Ukrainians who
                     are expected to arrive in the area in the coming weeks as refugees.
Individual groups at Stony Brook University launched several efforts to support Ukrainian
                     students and scholars. They include a university teach-in last month on the war in Ukraine, organized by the Marie Colvin Center for International Reporting;
                     a collaboration to finance short-term visits to Stony Brook for Ukrainian scientists
                     by the Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, the Department of Mathematics, and
                     the Simons Foundation; and various student-led fundraising and donation efforts.
In addition, the Office of the Provost is instituting several more programmatic initiatives
                     to help Ukrainian students and scholars. These are cross-institutional and cross-disciplinary,
                     and they are aimed at helping college students and scholars at every level. You can
                     find a summary of these initiatives here. If you need more information, please do not hesitate to send an email to globalaffairs@stonybrook.edu.
These efforts show a meaningful commitment on the part of Stony Brook University and
                     its community to make a difference in the lives of others. At the same time, our efforts
                     around the war in Ukraine bring up an important reminder to us all about diversity,
                     equity, and inclusion: There are others in the world who are suffering. I believe
                     it is incumbent upon us all to take care to acknowledge the struggles of other people
                     and nations worldwide, and to make a sincere effort to help if we can. I hope our
                     collective efforts to assist Ukraine can serve as a future template for creating similar
                     relief offerings for those suffering from unconscionable acts of inhumanity in other
                     parts of the world.
At Stony Brook University, we welcome more than 4,400 international students from
                     more than 100 countries each year. This is a point of honor, and we consider it our
                     duty to help our global community. When we do so, we are stronger together.
Sincerely,
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Maurie McInnis
President
