The community life of the Romania Semester means both enjoying the Romanian culture and traditions of local friends and committing ourselves to one another as participants, gathering for a weekly dinner at the director's home, debriefing on our experience, and devoting ourselves through prayer and study to the theme of being change agents for the Kingdom.
Students stay about half the time in a homestay with a local Romanian family and half the time in apartments managed by New Horizons Foundation. The homestays introduce students to how Romanian families live off the land and allow students to experience the rhythms of nature and of the liturgical calendar of the Orthodox Church still followed by many Romanians. The apartments are safe, clean and fully-equipped but allow students to experience the conditions of most Romanians living in large communist-era apartment blocks.
The community life of the Romania Semester means both enjoying the Romanian culture and traditions of local friends and committing ourselves to one another as participants, gathering for a weekly dinner at the director's home, debriefing on our experience, and devoting ourselves through prayer and study to the theme of being change agents for the Kingdom.
Students stay about half the time in a homestay with a local Romanian family and half the time in apartments managed by New Horizons Foundation. The homestays introduce students to how Romanian families live off the land and allow students to experience the rhythms of nature and of the liturgical calendar of the Orthodox Church still followed by many Romanians. The apartments are safe, clean and fully-equipped but allow students to experience the conditions of most Romanians living in large communist-era apartment blocks.
The community life of the Romania Semester means both enjoying the Romanian culture and traditions of local friends and committing ourselves to one another as participants, gathering for a weekly dinner at the director's home, debriefing on our experience, and devoting ourselves through prayer and study to the theme of being change agents for the Kingdom.
Students stay about half the time in a homestay with a local Romanian family and half the time in apartments managed by New Horizons Foundation. The homestays introduce students to how Romanian families live off the land and allow students to experience the rhythms of nature and of the liturgical calendar of the Orthodox Church still followed by many Romanians. The apartments are safe, clean and fully-equipped but allow students to experience the conditions of most Romanians living in large communist-era apartment blocks.
The community life of the Romania Semester means both enjoying the Romanian culture and traditions of local friends and committing ourselves to one another as participants, gathering for a weekly dinner at the director's home, debriefing on our experience, and devoting ourselves through prayer and study to the theme of being change agents for the Kingdom.
Students stay about half the time in a homestay with a local Romanian family and half the time in apartments managed by New Horizons Foundation. The homestays introduce students to how Romanian families live off the land and allow students to experience the rhythms of nature and of the liturgical calendar of the Orthodox Church still followed by many Romanians. The apartments are safe, clean and fully-equipped but allow students to experience the conditions of most Romanians living in large communist-era apartment blocks.
The community life of the Romania Semester means both enjoying the Romanian culture and traditions of local friends and committing ourselves to one another as participants, gathering for a weekly dinner at the director's home, debriefing on our experience, and devoting ourselves through prayer and study to the theme of being change agents for the Kingdom.
Students stay about half the time in a homestay with a local Romanian family and half the time in apartments managed by New Horizons Foundation. The homestays introduce students to how Romanian families live off the land and allow students to experience the rhythms of nature and of the liturgical calendar of the Orthodox Church still followed by many Romanians. The apartments are safe, clean and fully-equipped but allow students to experience the conditions of most Romanians living in large communist-era apartment blocks.
The community life of the Romania Semester means both enjoying the Romanian culture and traditions of local friends and committing ourselves to one another as participants, gathering for a weekly dinner at the director's home, debriefing on our experience, and devoting ourselves through prayer and study to the theme of being change agents for the Kingdom.
Students stay about half the time in a homestay with a local Romanian family and half the time in apartments managed by New Horizons Foundation. The homestays introduce students to how Romanian families live off the land and allow students to experience the rhythms of nature and of the liturgical calendar of the Orthodox Church still followed by many Romanians. The apartments are safe, clean and fully-equipped but allow students to experience the conditions of most Romanians living in large communist-era apartment blocks.