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Surprise reader: “Social problems don’t get solved by staying silent about them”

By Urs Habegger, Surprise

Regular street paper readers will recognise the long running technique of profiling a street paper vendor. Swiss magazine Surprise has chosen to reverse the perspective. Urs Habegger (65), who works as a Surprise vendor in Rapperswil, provides a portrait of one of his regular customers. Katharina Hiller is a pastor; here, she reflects on her path towards the religious life and on the importance of giving voice to social issues.


Katharina Hiller buys Surprise from Urs Habegger in Rapperswil and always has good conversations with him. Hiller is a Protestant pastor who moved from Germany to Rapperswil-Jona with her husband Eli and her daughter Marla in 2007. Tomma, her second daughter, was born in Switzerland. Hiller is uncomplicated, approachable, confidence-inspiring, and there is a zest for life in her eyes and face. This is how she looks as she sits: calm, self-assured, and experienced. She starts speaking by stating a resolute “no” in response to my first question.

“No, I didn’t have the desire to study theology during my childhood or in my early adolescence. It only came later,” Hiller says. “I grew up in a parsonage. So I spent my childhood and my teenage years in close proximity to the church. I didn’t know what to study after graduation, whether medicine, English, or something else. So I moved to Canada and worked there as a nanny for a year. Then, probably also because of the geographical and mental distance, the desire grew in me to live my life as I had known it from my upbringing.

Photo by Urs Habegger

“When I returned to Germany, I enrolled to study theology,” she continues. “In order to earn some pocket money, I worked as a cleaner, at times in a bakery, and also as an organist. I mainly played the church organ. I had already obtained the corresponding diploma during my teenage years. English soldiers were stationed in my hometown of Minden. It was with thanks to these soldiers that I accompanied my first church services as an organist.

“After the first two years of my career, I got married. My husband had just finished his doctorate in mechanical engineering and our daughter Marla came into the world. After completing our studies, we lived pretty freely,” Hiller recalls. “We thought: Could we live somewhere else besides Germany? Yes, we can, was the answer. My husband Eli found an attractive job at the University of Applied Sciences Rapperswil, and I later did too, as a pastor. We like it here and have never regretted this choice. The best gift I ever received is to live alongside my husband and our two daughters. I’m so happy that I just have that.

“And music,” she says with a smile. “I couldn’t live without it. It is also a gift that my parents brought me up in freedom, and that I’m allowed to do what I think is right. And of course, there is my faith in God. Just to feel that God is with me, that He accompanies me, protects me, and to have the certainty that He is there, to feel that I share my life with Him: that is my source of strength. God is involved in my life.”

“I buy Surprise because I simply like the magazine, the quality of the journalistic work, and the choice of topics. Social problems don’t get solved by staying silent about them. They have to be given voice. As a pastor, I know about the concerns, needs, and fears of the socially disadvantaged. Of course, I also buy Surprise to support sellers such as yourself. This is how you earn a living.”

Translated via Translators Without Borders

Courtesy of Surprise / International Network of Street Papers