Our Chief of Staff (Acting), Inna Malaia

Inna Malaria serves as Ukraine Foundation’s Chief of Staff.

Inna Malaia is a seasoned business consultant, self-leadership trainer, and motivational speaker known for her unique ability to fuse strategic acumen with deep human insight. With a passion for purposeful transformation and inclusive growth, Inna Malaia empowers leaders, teams, and communities to thrive in the face of change. Her professional journey reflects a powerful blend of international experience, personal resilience, and a bold commitment to social impact.

As Founder and CEO of Bevel World, Inna Malaia leads a premier consulting and training firm that leverages the Enneagram methodology, human-centric strategy, and organizational psychology to drive meaningful and measurable change. Her work spans corporate boardrooms and grassroots initiatives, focusing on enhancing team dynamics, cultivating self-leadership, and building agile, values-based cultures. She has designed and delivered high-impact programs for clients such as UBS, SAP, Nestlé, UNHCR, and start-ups in Europe, MENA, and the U.S., consistently earning recognition for her ability to align personal growth with business results.

Inna Malaia also serves as President of Bevel ON, a nonprofit dedicated to empowering displaced professionals, underrepresented groups, and emerging entrepreneurs through upskilling and capacity-building programs. From supporting refugees to coaching women in transition, her initiatives create pathways to economic independence and personal growth. Her advocacy for equity and resilience is not only a professional mission but a personal one -reflected in collaborations with impact-driven organizations, local governments, and international NGOs.

With a Master’s in International Business, executive education from IMD Switzerland, and a Certificate in Management from London Business School, Inna Malaia brings a rigorous academic foundation to her practice. Her earlier career spanned over a decade in strategic marketing and organizational development, where she led multicultural teams across Europe and the Middle East. Having reinvented herself through expat transitions, industry shifts, and entrepreneurship, Inna draws from real-world challenges to support others on similar paths.

As a global speaker, Inna inspires audiences at international conferences, corporate events, and leadership forums. She has spoken for platforms such as the Women in Leadership Economic Forum, TEDx, and industry-specific summits, addressing topics like purpose-driven living, leadership agility, and conscious transformation. Her talks spark actionable insight and deep personal reflection -backed by testimonials from C-suite leaders, HR directors, and social innovators who have seen lasting results.

Somnia Disaster Featured In ICTV News

Somnia Disaster Making the News in Korotko Pro

“Somnia Disaster”: Alex

Luna exhibition opened in the Verkhovna Rada

YEVHEN GORIN

April 29, 2025, Kyiv – On the days of the next anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, a unique art and documentary exhibition “Somnia Disaster” was solemnly opened in the building of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, under a glass dome. It became one of the central events of this year’s commemorative events and a symbolic reminder of the value of human errors and the responsibility for the future.

The exhibition takes place during the regular session of the parliament.

The Somnia Disaster project combines art, photography, film materials and modern audio installations in Ukrainian and German. Only the photographic part of the project, created by a prominent Ukrainian photo artist, a representative of the Kharkiv School of Photography, Vladyslav Krasnoshchek, is presented in the parliament building.

The photos are not only the iconic locations of the Exclusion Zone, but also the same age as the tragedy: the author of the project, opera singer Alex Luna, and Ukrainian supermodel Snizhana Onopko.

Today, the exhibition “Somnia Disaster” is shown in the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. Its ideologist Alex Luna, having implemented the project in 2021, sought to emphasize the fragility of life and the importance of remembering it. Probably, he had a “artist’s premonition,” says Tetiana Tsyba, MP and head of the subcommitteee on the protection of the rights of children who suffered as a result of military aggression. After all, today the relevance of this topic has not decreased, but on the contrary, it has acquired a new sound.

The exhibition “Somnia Disaster” will be available for viewing in the Verkhovna Rada during the week. From June 18, the exhibition will be hosted by the Parliament of the Republic of Bulgaria.

Kyiv and Sofia: Alex Luna Taking Somnia Disaster -A Chernobyl-Fukushima Cultural Bridge- Across European Parliaments

At a time when the world stands precariously close to the threat of nuclear catastrophe, Somnia Disaster emerges as a powerful cultural project that unites two of the most devastating nuclear tragedies in human history: Chernobyl and Fukushima. This exhibition serves not only as a bridge between cultures, but also as a stark reminder of our shared responsibility to prevent such disasters in the future.

Somnia Disaster is being presented in a highly symbolic setting — the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine (Ukrainian Parliament) — from April 28 to May 2, during an active parliamentary session. Following this, the exhibition will move to the Parliament of Bulgaria from May 14 to May 21, where a major opening ceremony will be held. The event will bring together the Bulgarian Minister of Energy, Minister of Foreign Affairs, members of parliament from Bulgaria and Ukraine, as well as the Ambassadors of Japan and Ukraine, underlining the urgent international relevance of the project.

In an era when nuclear threats loom larger than ever, Somnia Disaster reminds us that memory, dialogue, and cross-cultural cooperation are vital for a safer future.

Somnia Disaster on Spotify

We are currently experiencing the greatest nuclear threat, which threatens not only Ukraine, but the entire world. What does it really look like in Ukraine’s largest nuclear power plant? What is the probability of a Chernobyl 2.0? This is what liquidators, military and scientists discuss in this podcast.

ukУкраїнська