frida there are no longer only ukrainians and israelis, but in general a-a medical mission frida medical delegation on a-a this the symbiosis of ukrainian doctors and european and israeli western doctors is a collaboration of volunteer doctors who work for free. our main mission is to provide highly qualified medicine in hard -to-reach places . we see patients who have not seen a doctor, not even a woman, and two or three years before the war, from this in our delegation are doctors, dermatologists, oncologists, urologists. cities are experts - these are narrowly specialized doctors who come and receive them a-a in their cities and regions of romana, but you personally went to ukraine er-er with some new feelings, you just understand at the beginning of the war many people left ukraine yes and you in in the first days, we immediately went to help. why did you decide to do this? what prompted you to do this? i have been cooperating and being friends with ukrainian patients and doctors for 15 years, and in these 15 years, we have accepted more than 150 doctors in israel for advanced training. which i represent her, this is the ihla hospital in the first medical center of tel aviv, this is a hospital that over the past 10 years, we have accepted approximately 4,000 difficult ukrainian patients for treatment in israel, because of this, for all these years of collaboration and cooperation, we have always tried to build barriers and bridges which connect us and it so happened that on february 24 i was on a business trip to kyiv, i am still my colleagues and friends, and we simply decided that we do not have such an opportunity to leave our friends here, forget it and we 24 february happened in ukraine, and this is the beginning of the medical mission, where we are, until the victory, and after that we will be together with ukrainian friends, patients, and the ukrainian people. first, you did the right thing at the border. первый дни войны and we brought about 300 israeli doctors who are on the border of mogilev-podolsk on the border of palanka, this is the border with odessa. uh, we received about a dozen patients a day who got to the border uh, two days and a half days, uh , people who were very cold, who couldn't even collect their medicines, who were very urgent, even had some cases of childbirth, who these people were accepted by our doctors at the border. from the first days, we started our mission there . we did not know how the entire intervention would be and how the first days of the war would be, and certainly in emergency medicine . first of all, you are needed to work there where there is some where there is a correct normal calm a-a field from this this is the point where we chose where we can work calmly and if necessary evacuate there in the center from this we started there yes and well already after the first week eh maybe when they formed the entire material base there and the interlocutors and the arrival of all the doctors logistically played from all over the world , maybe they relocated to ukraine and started working inside ukraine. border points, how did it then arise? this is a significant association called frida my grandmother, who was born in ukraine. she told me all my life about the second world war, the holocaust, the ghetto, and she herself survived. she was born . he was in ukraine and told me about the evacuation that was in central asia to tashkent. these are all the memories of the war that i heard from my grandmother. she was a teacher and director of the school. by the way , she taught me to speak well. to sing ukrainian songs and a little bit, and i didn't study the ukrainian language. yes, my grandmother had such a favorite song, do you remember, i can say that my favorite song is chervona ruta, and the most favorite ukrainian song. to be named in honor of my grandmother, who remains for me a very heroic, highly moral, correct, good person. she is ukrainian, and probably that’s all. this is her love for ukraine, which probably passed on to me and inspired me to stay and do what we are doing now. i think that my grandmother even not i could imagine that people from ukraine will ha