The Hotel Hanul Fullton, a hotel and ministry center run by The United Methodist Church in Romania, hosts numerous programs to help Ukrainian refugees, as well as the rest of the community. The hotel is not only an answered prayer for refugees but also for the church.
The Rev. Rares Calugar, superintendent of the church in Romania and overseer of the hotel, said they began praying for a place to house the ministry 10 years ago.
“We have been in a garage, and then we started to pray for such a place,” he said.
Lynda (left), who fled fighting near Chernobyl, Ukraine, and Juko, who is Romanian, work together at the United Methodist Hotel Hanul Fullton. Despite not sharing a common language, the two women work together each day to clean rooms at the hotel, where Lynda and other Ukrainian refugees are staying.
The hotel became available during the economic downturn due to the pandemic, and the church bought it in June 2021. The second floor is still rented out to hotel guests for income to support the ministries, but the rest of the rooms house various non-governmental organization (NGO) partners and shelter Ukrainian refugees.
The church’s NGO is called Asociatia Phoneo, and there are six other organizations at the hotel that offer programs like leadership development for teens, housing for young women who have aged out of orphanages, and oncology treatment for women. Calugar said the vision is to gather more NGOs and social projects into one place, “to be support for each other in what we are doing.”
Anca Beu, Asociatia Phoneo’s project manager, sold her manufacturing business to work with the ministry. She said they had big dreams but couldn’t have anticipated what would become the main area of focus: helping Ukrainians fleeing the war.
“This issue with refugees and with Ukraine was unexpected, but from God, it was expected. It changed our lives,” Beu said.
Ukrainian families enjoy a weekly dinner at the United Methodist Hotel Hanul Fullton and community center.
A day after the Russian invasion, the church organized the first transport of humanitarian aid to Ukraine: blankets, water and winter clothes. They’ve been sending food, medicine and supplies every week since, which they coordinate through the Revs. Oleg and Yulia Starodubets of The United Methodist Church in Ukraine. In early March, an initial $10,000 solidarity grant from the United Methodist Committee on Relief helped to provide housing and food assistance for around 250 Ukrainian refugees.
The Rev. Samuel Goia, who delivered the first shipment, said he and Yulia Starodubets had communicated through Facebook but had never met, “and it was like just some connection that God did. It was a lot of emotions and we prayed together.”
Beu said it’s helpful to contract with local Ukrainians rather than the government. “They know the needs, they know the rules and they know how to find the solution the right way.”
Ukrainian families enjoy a weekly dinner at the United Methodist Hotel Hanul Fullton and community center.
When Ukrainians began to arrive, many were heading on to Western Europe, so Calugar said they gave the refugees a place to stay for a few days. “Some came very confused, didn’t know where to go,” he said.
Some who initially planned to move on wound up staying because of the community the church formed around them. In addition to shelter, the church offers facilities for business meetings and hosts a weekly dinner so Ukrainians have a chance to see and speak with fellow countrymen. Some also have started attending worship services.
“We are now as many Ukrainians as Romanians at this point, and it's been cool to have multicultural church services,” said Leah Harper, a missionary who serves at the hotel. Though she’s not appointed through the denomination, she’s supported by her home church, Reynoldsburg United Methodist near Columbus, Ohio.
“I come back to the resilience of the people who come here,” Harper said. “They’re joyful and I don’t know how they can be — that’s a testimony to them and the Lord and his goodness.”
Sergei, who fled the war in Ukraine, washes cars at a business in Cluj-Napoca to help support his family. The family is being supported by the United Methodist Church in Romania.
For those who are staying for longer periods, or perhaps permanently, Calugar works to find housing and jobs.
Sergei, a refugee from Kharkiv, got his job washing cars at an auto repair shop through Calugar, almost by accident. Calugar said he came for a car wash, only to be told he’d need to do it himself because the owner couldn’t find workers.
How to help
Paulina and her children, Sasha and Oleg, are among two families from Ukraine who are taking shelter in a house provided by The United Methodist Church in Cluj-Napoca.
To donate, please give to UMCOR’s International Disaster Response and Recovery fund, Advance #982450, or UMCOR Global Migration, Advance # 3022144.
“The owner told me he didn’t care if they spoke Romanian, that they’d get along,” he said. “Sergei had just arrived and had only one day to rest, but the first day, they put him to work and then were pleased with him.
“The owner always thanks me now, because he said (Sergei is) a hard worker and he can count on him.”
Sergei, whose wife and children came to Romania ahead of him, said he plans to stay.
“Everything in my village is destroyed, all houses flat, no place to return to. There is no family left there. A tank even ran over my car and crushed it,” he said.
Sergei lives with his family in a house the church has rented for the next year, along with another mother and her children. Everyone has their own bedroom and they share the kitchen and common living areas.
“In March, I had the idea to rent a house for mothers and children because the need is so great,” Calugar said. An UMCOR grant paid for the house rent.
“It’s wonderful here; there are so many people that help us and are very friendly. It’s a beautiful city,” said Paulina, Sergei’s wife.
The church also helps to support a group of elderly refugees living outside of Cluj at the monastery for the Church of the Assumption in Cornești. Among them are Paulina’s parents.
“We have different languages and it’s hard to understand each other, but we try,” said Sergiy, 70, who is from Kharkiv and is Paulina’s father.
Calugar said that they brought this group back while transporting food to Ukraine. On the weekends, the church van picks them up and takes them to the city so they can go to the market or get haircuts. They have lunch at the hotel so they can see other Ukrainians and feel like part of the community.
Vladimir Trofimovich (right) and Sergiy Mikhailovich, from the Kharkiv, Ukraine, region, describe the damage done to their homes by the Russian military. They are living temporarily in the monastery for the Church of the Assumption in Cornești, Romania. The United Methodist Church of Romania is helping provide support there.
Vladimir, 77, who fled from the Donbas region with his wife, Alla, 75, said he didn’t know how Romanians would react to them upon arrival.
“We prepared for the worst. But the people were so kind and inviting and all our fears were broken,” he said.
Natalia, 73, from the Kharkiv region, agreed.
“It’s like paradise, we’re very thankful. Rares (Calugar) and the priest are very good to us. We have everything we need and we pray for God to give health to everyone.”
The Revs. Rares Calugar (left) and Jack Amick speak outside the Church of the Assumption in Cornești. The church has opened its monastery to house refugees who fled Ukraine and United Methodists are helping provide support there. Calugar is superintendent of The United Methodist Church in Romania and Amick is director of Global Migration for the United Methodist Committee on Relief.
In September, UMCOR provided an additional grant, part of which will cover expenses for the rental house and the residents at the monastery for the next six months. Though most refugees have either returned or plan to someday, Calugar said some of the group at the monastery have told him, “You will bury me here.”
Goia, who is pastor at Way of Life United Methodist Church in Micești, said that as the war drags on, he has seen “donor fatigue” and a decline in help from the community, which means the church has an increasingly important role.
“What I love about The UMC is the marriage of preaching and evangelism with social work,” he said.
The Rev. Jack Amick (center, with back to camera) of the United Methodist Committee on Relief leads a prayer for refugees from Ukraine who are living at the monastery for the Church of the Assumption in Cornești, where The United Methodist Church of Romania is helping provide support. The Rev. Rares Calugar (left, rear), superintendent of The United Methodist Church in Romania, and translator Alexandra Aishpur (right, rear) joined the prayer.
Beu said the social programs at the hotel are growing so rapidly that she has recommended a separate space for the church activities, but Calugar is hesitant to separate them because he wants people to see the church in daily life.
“I have hotel guests ask, ‘How come there’s a chapel in a hotel?’ And then I can start to share with them the gospel,” he said.
Original source can be found here.