Two Smeal Students Travel To Romania With Habitat For Humanity
Two Smeal College of Business students spent 10 days in Romania this month working with local families, community leaders from Austin, Texas, and students from four other U.S. universities to refurbish a Soviet-era apartment building through Habitat for Humanity International's Global Village Program.
Two Smeal Students Travel To Romania With Habitat For Humanity
UNIVERSITY
PARK, PA (September 28, 2006) – Two Smeal College of Business students
spent 10 days in Romania this month working with local families,
community leaders from Austin, Texas, and students from four other U.S.
universities to refurbish a Soviet-era apartment building through
Habitat for Humanity International's Global Village Program.
Jeff
Kranzel, junior in accounting and Spanish, and Scott Walters, senior in
finance, also got to explore some of Romania on the trip, which was
organized and funded by the Roy F. and Joann Cole Mitte Foundation.
Kranzel and Walters are both recipients of the Mitte Foundation’s
$20,000 scholarship.
Upon arriving in Bucharest on Sept. 1,
the participants embarked on a weekend tour of Romania organized by the
Mitte Foundation. The group explored the city and the Romanian
countryside, including several castles and monasteries in Transylvania
and the Carpathian Mountains.
Following the weekend of
sightseeing, Kranzel, Walters, and other Mitte team members arrived in
Pitesti, Romania, to begin six days of work with three Romanian
families to begin converting a two-story building into 12 family
apartments.
Their first project was to dig ditches for pipes
to bring fresh water to the apartments. Prior to their arrival, the
small, one-room apartments lacked running water and a bathroom. Once
the ditches were completed, the team began to lay pipe, remove walls,
expand the size of the apartments, and add a second room each one.
For
both Kranzel and Walters, one of the highlights of the trip was the
interaction with the local residents and the children who played near
the construction site. At one point, the entire team took up a
collection among themselves to purchase toys, diapers, and medicine for
local babies and children. The supplies were then delivered to Rusescu
Pediatric Hospital in Bucharest, along with receiving blankets handmade
by the mother of a Texas State student. Rusescu attends to abandoned
infants from the local area.
Kranzel said he was originally
interested in the experience not just to help people, but for the
opportunity to spend 10 days in Europe. What he got, he said, was far
more than a vacation.
"It truly was a life-changing
experience," he said. "The trip really made me appreciate what we have
here in the United States. When you consider that many Romanians can't
afford to meet basic needs like food or proper shelter, it makes many
of our problems seem trivial."
He said that some of the people he met in Pitesti regularly worked 20-hour shifts for a salary of about $150 a month.
Walters
was fascinated by the economic change he witnessed taking place in
Romania. "From a business student's perspective, it was very
interesting to the see the preparations under way in the country for
its entrance into the European Union and its monetary conversion to the
Euro," he said.
Both Kranzel and Walters say the experience is something they will not soon forget.
"We
all know how important philanthropy is and that it's important to be
good, generous corporate citizens; but it's so easy to forget in the
United States," Kranzel said. "But this trip burned it into my memory.
I won't forget what it's like in Romania. And that desire to give
back—whether it's here or abroad—is something that I won’t push aside
again. It's part of my life now."
The Texas-based Mitte
Foundation is a charity dedicated to fighting poverty and ignorance
around the world. As part of its mission, the foundation funds
scholarships for graduate and undergraduate students at several
universities. Recipients of the scholarships—undergraduate Mitte
Scholars and graduate Mitte Fellows—receive $5,000 annually from the
foundation.
Participation in the Romanian Habitat for
Humanity build was limited to Mitte Scholars and Fellows at
participating schools. In addition to Smeal, Indiana University, Ohio
State University, Texas A&M University, and Texas State University
sent students on the trip. It was up to each school to determine which
Mitte scholarship recipients could attend. Kranzel and Walters were
selected as the Smeal participants based on an essay competition.
Some photographs of the trip are available online, courtesy of Amanda Wente, an Ohio State Mitte Scholar, at media.smeal.psu.edu/zine/100106/romania/.
For more on the Mitte Scholarship Program at Smeal, visit www.smeal.psu.edu/mitte. The Mitte Foundation is online at www.mittefoundation.org.
REPORTERS & EDITORS: For more information, please contact Wyatt DuBois in the Smeal College of Business Media Relations Office at 814-863-3798 or wed112@psu.edu.
Penn State's Smeal College of Business offers highly ranked undergraduate, MBA, executive MBA, Ph.D., and executive education opportunities to more than 5,500 students at all levels. Featuring academic departments of accounting, finance, marketing, insurance and real estate, management, and supply chain and information systems, the college is also home to major research centers such as the Center for Supply Chain Research, the Institute for the Study of Business Markets, the Center for Digital Transformation, the Farrell Center for Corporate Innovation and Entrepreneurship, the Center for Global Business Studies, and the Center for the Management of Technological and Organizational Change.
