Near the Polish border, a musician plays music to welcome those fleeing Ukraine Refugees streaming across the border at the Medyka border crossing into Poland leave behind the air raid sirens and the sounds of war and are welcomed by musician Davide Martello.

Near the Polish border, a musician plays music to welcome those fleeing Ukraine

Near the Polish border, a musician plays music to welcome those fleeing Ukraine

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Davide Martello, an Italian man living in Germany, plays the piano for people who have fled Ukraine at the border crossing in Medyka, Poland. Kacper Pempel/Reuters hide caption

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Kacper Pempel/Reuters

Davide Martello, an Italian man living in Germany, plays the piano for people who have fled Ukraine at the border crossing in Medyka, Poland.

Kacper Pempel/Reuters

As bombs fell and people fled, pianist Davide Martello watched the Russian invasion of Ukraine unfold on TV. Unlike those racing to leave, however, Martello decided to head toward Ukraine. He put his cat in the car, hitched up his baby grand piano and began a long, 15-hour drive from his home in Germany.

"It's definitely better than staying at home in front of the TV and watching the news, you know?" Martello said.

Martello's destination was the Medyka border crossing, the busiest one between Poland and Ukraine, where a sprawling aid station had sprung up on the Polish side. Since he arrived a few weeks ago, Martello has watched as the aid station — and its needs — have grown. According to the United Nations, more than 3 million people have left Ukraine since the invasion began; as of earlier this week, more than 2 million of them had entered Poland.

"The people coming in, they need food, they need clothes," Martello said.

While speaking with NPR earlier this week, he gestured at piles of donated clothing and firewood stacked behind him. Volunteers passed out tea, food and toiletries.

Martello provided the music, playing soft songs like "Let It Be" by the Beatles and "Hallelujah" by Leonard Cohen. The notes he played filled the air and mingled with campfire smoke, inviting people to gather around him and listen. Sometimes they requested Ukrainian songs, which he tried his best to play.

"We people, we're made of emotions basically. We're thinkers. If we only think negative, that affects us. Our health, anything else. We need to stay positive. We need to try and think positive."

A Duet of Leonard Cohen's 'Hallelujah'

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For Martello, the experience has been especially moving. On one memorable occasion, an elderly woman held a blanket over Martello's head to shield him from the falling snow.

"She was singing with me, next to me, with the blanket on me, and it was snowing," he said. "That was a crazy moment."

For now, Martello has no plans to pack up and leave.

"People here still need some positivity, some art, music," he said. "I wish there were more musicians here, but I guess I'm the only one."

With that, it was time for him to go. A small crowd had formed, waiting for him to begin. And so, piano parked on the dirt at the Polish border, Davide Martello played.

The audio for this story was produced by Vincent Acovino and edited by Amy Isackson. Ayen Deng Bior and Mallory Yu adapted it for web.