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Every charitable organization in Russia has developed a crisis plan, Nyuta Federmesser, founder of the Vera charity foundation, told Forbes Talk. Large Western companies have left the Russian market and stopped working with NGOs, and it is difficult to attract new donors. It takes time to build new connections and contacts. What has changed in the industry since the start of the "special operation" in Ukraine, how international donors differ from Russian ones, and how the position of various NGOs has affected government support. Also in the interview: about the rehabilitation of those who returned from the battlefield, the mood of officials, and a compromise with conscience. Time codes: 00:00 – Start 01:20 – Charity during the "special operation": what has changed? 04:29 – Who was punished for calling for an end to the "special operation"? 08:42 – "The deterioration of the financial situation in charitable foundations is a matter of time" 11:18 – Which donor companies has charity lost? 16:54 – “Man-made death is a death that human civilization is called to avoid” 19:04 – On helping refugees and condemnation 25:34 – “I haven’t seen a single person who wouldn’t laugh at the programs with Solovyov and Simonyan” 28:00 – “When the pain from what’s happening reaches every family, everyone’s attitude will change” 30:03 – “I hate geopolitics” 32:56 – Is it a shame to hide men? 35:29 – Who did the fund lose due to mobilization? 38:46 – “We lived a very relaxed life”: the Israeli experience vs. the Russian experience 41:56 – Post-traumatic stress disorder: how to rehabilitate those who returned from a “special operation”? 47:32 – “If because of this they tell me: “Quit!” – I'll quit" 50:23 – "You're flying down the stairs and you're trying to grab hold" 54:09 – Have officials changed? Cooperation and ideas: [email protected] [email protected] For advertising: [email protected] #Forbes #ForbesTalk #Federmesser