Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Iana Gupalova, director of Hup, sits on a van loaded with supplies. 2 April 2022
Iana Gupalova, director of Hup, sits on a van loaded with supplies. 2 April 2022 - Credit: Iana Gupalova / Iana Gupalova - License: All Rights Reserved
Politics
Ukraine
Help Ukraine Personally Foundation
Amsterdam
Kharkiv
Nestle
Sunday, 3 April 2022 - 20:05

Share this article:

Amsterdam woman’s creative Ukraine fundraising events a hit

When Russia invaded Ukraine, Iana Gupalova had to mute a lot of her acquaintances on Instagram. While she was glad her non-Ukrainian friends were enjoying their lives, she wanted to focus all her energy on helping her fellow Ukrainians who were suffering.

"I had to take distance from my normal, everyday life," she told NL Times on Sunday while returning to the Netherlands from the border of Poland and Ukraine, where she was delivering supplies to Ukraine's border.

The Amsterdammer, originally from Kharkiv, soon found a way to use her passion for event planning to help people from her home country. “I realized that people will donate, but you can only do it once, twice max, and then people lose interest,” she said. “So I also have to get creative. And, thank God, I am creative.”

It was this need for an innovative way to raise money that led Gupalova to start hosting themed events in Amsterdam. Her first event, a pétanque tournament in late March at the bar Chez Miné, raised 1,400 euros that went toward a foundation for helping Ukrainians. Everything, from the pizza people ate, drinks they ordered and even songs they requested from the DJ, became a way for partygoers to donate.

“We hung QR codes all around, and there was a DJ so you can scan a code, pay a few euros, and then you order a song,” Gupalova said. “It was just a fun gathering for friends, a positive one, with Ukrainian decorations around.”

In the upcoming weeks, she is planning more fundraising events in the Dutch capital: a breathwork workshop, boat party and an evening with live music. Besides going toward a cause she believes in, Gupalova said creating such events is a dream she’s had for a while, and the war is now pushing her to put her skills into practice.

“The joke is that I had it inside of me, but I was always postponing. I wanted to be an event organizer for a while,” she said. “I love gifting experiences to people.”

She added that her circle is full of creative people, including DJs, dancers, business owners and wedding planners, who gladly support her. Money from the events goes straight to a foundation Gupalova started with several friends about a month ago. HUP, or Help Ukraine Personally, connects Ukrainian families to housing, education, medical resources and other things they might need to build a life in the Netherlands.

Gupalova’s own connection to the Netherlands stretches back 10 years. At age 20, she fell in love with the open-minded culture and started to feel more at home in the Netherlands than in her home country, she said. Eventually, through a job at Nestle, she was able to relocate to Amsterdam.

Now, though, she says Ukraine is always on her mind. Although she finds Dutch people to be supportive –– ”you can’t walk around in Amsterdam without seeing a Ukrainian flag now” –– she also knows that life continues as normal and people want to have a good time, she said.

“Because people get bored of sadness and pain, especially if they are not connected to the country directly,” Gupalova explained. “But still, they want to help. I like to draw attention and to engage them in a creative way, in a more fun way.”

HUP's next fundraising events will be posted soon on the foundation's Facebook page, Gupalova said. She also said people can contact her via Instagram if they can offer assistance.

Image
People gather at an event to raise money for Ukrainians organized by Iana Gupalova & Susanna van Uffelen on March 27, 2022
People gather at an event to raise money for Ukrainians organized by Iana Gupalova & Susanna van Uffelen on March 27, 2022 - Credit: HUP / Facebook - License: All Rights Reserved
Image
A QR code at a tournament to support Ukraine organized by Iana Gupalova & Susanna van Uffelen on March 27, 2022
A QR code at a tournament to support Ukraine organized by Iana Gupalova & Susanna van Uffelen on March 27, 2022 - Credit: HUP / Facebook - License: All Rights Reserved
Image
People gather at an event to raise money for Ukrainians organized by Iana Gupalova & Susanna van Uffelen on March 27, 2022
People gather at an event to raise money for Ukrainians organized by Iana Gupalova & Susanna van Uffelen on March 27, 2022 - Credit: HUP / Facebook - License: All Rights Reserved
Image
A van loaded with supplies delivered to the border of Poland and Ukraine. 2 April 2022
A van loaded with supplies delivered to the border of Poland and Ukraine. 2 April 2022 - Credit: Iana Gupalova / Iana Gupalova - License: All Rights Reserved

More like this

Image
Pro-Ukraine protest at an unknown location. February, 2022
Hundreds gather in Amsterdam to mark fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
Image
Amsterdam police officers take a 30-year-old man from Donetsk, Ukraine into custody for allegedly stabbing five people at random near Sint Nicolaasstraat. 27 March 2025
Motive remains unknown in Dam Square stabbings that injured five people
Image
The 34-hour version of Steve McQueen's documentary, Occupied City, shown on the Rijksmuseum façade in Amsterdam. September 2025
Steve McQueen's confronting 34-hour Amsterdam film, Occupied City, hits Rijksmuseum screens
Image
Amsterdam police officers take a 30-year-old man from Donetsk, Ukraine into custody for allegedly stabbing five people at random near Sint Nicolaasstraat. 27 March 2025
Three victims in Dam Square stabbings were close to death, prosecutor states
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Dutch regulator rejects claims Tesla misled regulators on self-driving safety data
  • Suspects in Amsterdam explosion officially investigated for planning ATM bombings
  • Amsterdam tells city stats agency to stop polling voter sentiment, election forecasts
  • Netherlands announces €500 million military aid package for Ukraine
  • VU students sentenced for assault, discriminatory remarks after Nazi song dispute

Top stories

  • VU students sentenced for assault, discriminatory remarks after Nazi song dispute
  • Dutch FM: Europe must quickly reduce reliance on U.S. military by 2030
  • Solvinity, company behind DigiD, appeals against government ban on U.S. takeover
  • Utrecht dethrones Noord-Holland as province with highest property values; Up 10.3% in NL
  • Dutch courts give harsher punishments to poorer people, study finds

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content