There are number of private medical school in eastern and southern Europe that do accept international students for graduate entry in medicine. Many of these programs offer instruction in English. But they are all private universities and do not give financial aid to international students. Can your family afford to pay the tuition and living expenses to attend?
To use one example-- Jagiellonian University Medical College in Poland costs €4500/year plus fees, living expenses, books, language school. (You need to speak Polish in order to do clinical rotations. This is likely true in other countries–you’ll need some degree of fluency in the local language in order to understand patients during your clinical training. You’ll also some fluency in order to be able to manage living in the country for 4-5 years.)
I can give you a website that lists graduate entry, instruction in English medical schools, but I cannot vouch for the accuracy of the website since it’s run by a commercial entity that makes it money off assisting students apply to these programs. I would consider information from it untrustworthy unless you can verify it yourself.
Edited to add: the issue with any of these private medical schools is that you are left completely on your own to find a medical internship in the country in which you plan to practice medicine. And you are also on your own after internship to find a residency (specialty training) if you want to do anything other than do general practice medicine.
You will not be able to to practice medicine in the US without first applying for and completing a medical residency program in the US. The process to get a US residency is complex and requires taking and passing all the same exams that US medical students take. Your odds of getting a US residency are better if you can get some US clinical experience during your medical education since you will need at least one letter of recommendation from a US physician who you have worked for in a clinical setting.
Because medical education standards and curricula vary so much by country. it’s best to attend a medical school in the country in which you plan to settle and practice medicine.
The ECFMG certifies medical education as meeting basic standards and handles the registration and verification process for international medical students wanting to come train in the US (and Australia! My daughter had to work with the ECFMG to get her US medical education recognized in Australia)