Silja Walter

Silja (Cécile) Walter, Sister M. Hedwig OSB

Silja Walter on SRF 1, Sternstunde Religion, broadcast on 29 June 2003
Born (1919-04-23)23 April 1919
Rickenbach, Switzerland
Died 31 January 2011(2011-01-31) (aged 91)
Fahr Abbey, Switzerland
Occupation Novelist, poet, nun
Genre Adult literature
Notable awards Silja Walter#Awards
Years active 19441999

Silja Walter (23 April 1919 31 January 2011) was a Swiss author and Benedictine nun in the Fahr Abbey in Switzerland. Born as Cécile Walter in Rickenbach, Solothurn, in Switzerland, at the age of 30 she became a nun: her religious name was Maria Hedwig (OSB). Her brother, Otto F. Walter, was also a popular Swiss author.

Biography

Cécile «Silja» Walter's father Otto was the founder of the Walter Verlag publishing house, writer and member of the Swiss National Council, her mother, Maria Anna Cäcilia Walter-Glutz,[1] wrote lyrics for domestic use. Silja was the second oldest of eight daughters, her only brother was the writer Otto F. Walter (1928–1994). Silja Walter studied five years at a teachers' training college and began her studies of literature at the University of Fribourg. Due to a life-threatening lung disease, she had to break. In 1944 her first poetry collection "Die ersten Gedichte" was published; as relatively popular author, in 1948 she joined the Benedictine convent of Fahr Abbey.

Work and reputation

Silja Walter's work of about 60 publications includes poetry and prose, as well as festivals, oratorios and theological texts reflecting her life as nun. Silja Walter has received many awards, among them literary and cultural prices of the city of Zürich, of the Swiss Schiller Foundation in 1956 and 1992 and the art prize of the canton of Solothurn. Her book «Eine Insel finden» ("To find an island", 1984) was a best selling work, based on a radio show that confronted Silja Walter with her brother Otto F. Walter. The Walter siblings had a completely different literary activity: Her brother was a dedicated social critics, Silja Walter wrote lyrics "far away from the world" in a monastery. «Der Wolkenbaum» ("The tree in the clouds", 1992) was even more successful, reflecting Silja Walter's family history. In 2009, her biography was published, «Das dreifarbene Meer» ("The three-colored sea"), written probably on her computer: at the age of 80 she started to use computers, in 2010, she was allowed by the Prioress of the Fahr Abbey to use an Internet access.[2][3]

Awards

Bibliography (highlights)

Literature

References

  1. Corinna Jäger-Trees (2013-08-20). "Walter, Otto" (in German). HDS. Retrieved 2014-12-14.
  2. Tages-Anzeiger (January 31, 2011): Silja Walter ist tot (German)
  3. kath.ch (January 31, 2011): Prior Irene Gassmann, Fahr Abbey: "Zum Tod von Schwester Hedwig (Silja) Walter OSB" (German)

External links

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