The Program
Where healing becomes a way of life.
Where land, rhythm, structure, and belonging rebuild the soul.
Beit Mivtah Banecha is a residential land-based restoration program for those coming out of deep trauma, offering a complete structure for healing, self-sufficiency, and long-term re-entry into life with dignity and purpose.
Residents enter a full ecosystem of healing—daily rhythms, work-based therapy, spiritual alignment, community life, and hands-on training that leads toward stability, dignity, and long-term purpose. Nothing is rushed. Nothing is forced. Everything is walked out slowly, season by season.
The full journey begins with a 91-day mandatory preparation phase and continues in 12-month increments, up to 3 years, ending with a stable foundation for life beyond the House.
Entry Point: The House of Quarantine
All residents begin their journey with a 91-day intensive known as the House of Quarantine. This mandatory intake phase stabilizes trauma responses, lays a spiritual foundation, and gently detoxes both body and belief systems. It is a season of deep quieting—where the body stops bracing, the mind clears, and the soul finally finds space to breathe.
In these 91 Days residents walk through:
- Emotional detox and trauma education
- Daily functional movement to prepare for outdoor work
- Spiritual orientation, language, and doctrine alignment
- Personality assessments and behavioral evaluations
- Community rhythms, early waking, and nightly grounding
- A reset of technology habits, overstimulation, and dysregulation
This season gives time to observe, decompress, and decide—without pressure—if this is the path they are ready to walk. It is not a punishment. It is a preparation—physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual.
The Covenant Path
Year 1: Stabilization & Awakening
The first year is dedicated to stabilization, safety, and re-learning how to live inside your body. Residents develop consistent routines, reconnect with truth, practice emotional regulation, and build relationships based on trust instead of fear. This year is about awakening—slowly rediscovering identity, agency, and internal quiet.
Year 2: Deep Healing & Identity Work
This season focuses on unlearning survival patterns, healing internal fragmentation, strengthening relational capacity, and aligning identity with truth rather than trauma. Residents begin taking on responsibility within the community, growing in confidence, and learning to walk in gentle authority.
Year 3: Belonging, Purpose & Readiness
Residents begin preparing for life beyond the House—planning business opportunities, stabilizing income, developing leadership, and walking out relational maturity. This is the year of purpose, ownership, and readiness. By the end, residents are equipped, confident, and no longer defined by what happened to them.
Daily Rhythms
Our days shift with the sun, the seasons, and the needs of the land. The House lives in rhythm—not chaos. We eat together every evening. Lunches are shared in smaller work groups, wherever we’re working that day. Breakfast may be communal or family-based depending on the season.
We hunt during cold snaps.
We preserve the harvest in summer.
We render tallow and make soap in the fall.
We give the land rest in winter.
Meals are made from scratch. Rest is respected. Sleep is protected. We follow creation’s pace—and grow with it.
Skills Training
Residents rotate through core work areas, gaining hands-on mastery and discovering their unique giftings. These skills restore dignity, independence, and long-term stability.
Homestead Skills
Residents learn gardening, orchard care, seed saving, composting, soapmaking, herbal medicine, tool use, and seasonal land management. These skills restore dignity, help regulate the nervous system, and reconnect residents to creation.
Animal Husbandry
Poultry, dairy, goats, sheep, cattle. Residents learn milking, cheese making, breeding cycles, birthing support, feed systems, fencing, and humane handling. Caring for animals teaches responsibility, gentleness, and embodied leadership.
Preservation & Provisioning
Butchering, canning, smoking, tanning hides, fermenting, rendering, dehydrating. These skills build confidence and ensure residents can feed themselves and their families with skill and stability.
Traditional Trades
Blacksmithing, carpentry, masonry, fencing, tool repair, natural building. These trades help residents discover practical gifting, create income streams, and rebuild identity through work that requires focus, precision, and strength.
Textiles & Craft
Wool processing, spinning, weaving, sewing, leatherwork, pattern creation, quilting. Residents create handmade goods for sale—developing mastery, creativity, and marketable skills for long-term stability.
Residents earn income from the sale of their handmade goods and byproducts. These funds are saved for them until graduation—supporting land purchase, housing, or entrepreneurial goals.
Growth & Milestones
We don’t mark progress through performances, emotional highs, public testimonies, or forced disclosures. Here, maturity is measured by what is happening inside you—not what can be displayed outside.
Progress looks like:
- recovering faster after a trigger
- holding peace longer between storms
- choosing truth over fear
- becoming a better sister, brother, parent, or friend
- showing up consistently
- learning to rest without shame
Spiritual growth is measured relationally—through choices, alignment, and covenant responsibility. Residents gradually take on leadership roles, helping those who come behind them.

Year 3: Exit Planning
In their final year, residents begin preparing for what comes next. This season focuses on building long-term stability—financially, spiritually, relationally, and practically.
Residents work with mentors to:
- design business plans or product lines
- build resumes, portfolios, and certifications
- create sustainable income streams
- plan for land, housing, and future community
- develop leadership and relational maturity
- transition gradually and safely into independence
When they leave, they leave equipped:
- A herd or flock they raised themselves
- A savings account earned through their labor
- A set of marketable skills
- A plan for what’s next
- A community that remains their home
Some stay. Some visit. Some return later to serve.
All are always welcome.
Ready to Explore the Program?
Healing happens slowly, steadily, and together. If you feel the quiet yes, we invite you to learn more.


