top of page
HearthFinder Blog


Between Progress and Tradition: Romania’s Uneasy Relationship with LGBTQ+
Romania stands at a cultural crossroads — modern in law, traditional in spirit, and still deciding which part of itself will define the future. The Contradiction at the Heart of Modern Romania At first glance, Romania seems firmly part of the European modern project. It is a member of the European Union, bound by human-rights conventions, and home to a young generation that travels, studies, and works across a continent that increasingly values equality. Yet beneath that Euro

Jillian Aurora
Nov 10, 20255 min read


The Quiet Guardians of the Courtyard: How Romanians Love Their Cats
Every city and village in Romania seems to be charmed with the presence of cats. They stretch across sunlit steps, curl up on cafe chairs, and nap on cobblestones as if they own the streets. Here, cats exist in a shared space between domestic and wild, beloved and free. They are not seen as pests. They are accepted, fed, and adored by nearly everyone. When you walk down a Romanian street, you’ll see bowls of food left under park benches, tiny shelters tucked beside apartment

Jillian Aurora
Nov 9, 20253 min read


Grounded
In recent weeks, I’ve written about the quiet tightening of global mobility and the slow erosion of our ability to move freely through the world. For many, this idea feels dramatic, something that could never happen to U.S. citizens. But this week, we've seen yet another crack in our fragile system. The Federal Aviation Administration has announced plans to reduce air traffic by about ten percent across forty major U.S. airports. The reason is not a storm or security threat,

Jillian Aurora
Nov 8, 20253 min read


The Divided Soul of Christianity
When I asked a local in Brașov to explain the difference between Catholicism and Orthodoxy, he didn’t quote scripture or mention rituals. He smiled and said simply, “We didn’t have crusades, the Inquisition, or witch trials.” It was such an abrupt, almost startling answer — not theological, but historical, and human. The divergent memory was of two civilizations that shared one faith but grew into very different moral worlds. Divergent Paths from the Same Root Both Catholicis

Jillian Aurora
Nov 6, 20254 min read


When to Stay, When to Go: The Hard Truth About Fighting Fascism
This isn’t about fear—it’s about discernment. Across history, people have faced the impossible question of whether to stay and fight for their country or leave to escape the oppression. It’s a question layered with emotion, loyalty, and grief. The stories we’re told about heroism often glorify the ones who stayed—those who defied tyranny from within, who risked everything for the chance to reclaim their homeland. But those stories, as moving as they are, rarely tell the full

Jillian Aurora
Nov 5, 20254 min read


The Hearth That Travels: Roma Folklore in Transylvania
When most people think of Transylvanian folklore, they picture a world of haunted castles, wandering spirits, and ancient Christian rituals. The stories that were shaped by Romanian peasants, Saxon settlers, and Hungarian nobility. Yet there is another, quieter current that runs through the same mountains and valleys: the folklore of the Roma. Unlike the fixed traditions of the villages, Roma stories move. They travel from place to place, changing shape like smoke in the wind

Jillian Aurora
Nov 4, 20255 min read


When Borders Closed Quietly: How Mobility Contracts Before Collapse
Freedom of movement rarely disappears in one day. It erodes through a slow tightening of systems, long before the public recognizes what’s happening. The Warning Signs Always Look Ordinary Every era believes it will see the signs coming. People assume that if things ever turned dangerous or authoritarian, it would be obvious. There would be soldiers in the streets, televised declarations, unmistakable rupture. But history shows otherwise. The loss of mobility, the quiet seali

Jillian Aurora
Nov 2, 20255 min read


The Cats Who Bore the Cross
Every October, the internet fills with warnings: “Keep your black cats inside. Pagans might harm them for Halloween.” It’s an old accusation, recycled year after year, and completely unfounded. The historical record shows that the real persecution of cats came not from pagans, but from the religious. The Church and its faithful turned the cat from a household guardian into a symbol of the Devil. Their crusade against these animals left a tragic trail of fur, fire, and fear th

Jillian Aurora
Oct 31, 20254 min read
HearthFinder: Building safe futures, one hearth at a time.
bottom of page