The Phnom Penh Post

Part-time hermit job in Austria

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THERE are no neighbours and the views are stunning, and if you can live without heating, running water, electricit­y and internet, then why not apply for a job as a hermit?

Such is the position that Saalfelden near Salzburg in Austria is seeking to fill, inhabiting alone one of central Europe’s last hermitages, built into a cliff above the town.

“Since its creation 350 years ago, the Saalfelden hermitage was inhabited every year. But we don’t have a successor to the last hermit,” local priest Alois Moser said.

According to a job descriptio­n, the successful candidate should have a “connection to Christian belief” and be “at peace with themselves” at 1,400 metres above sea level.

Don’t expect complete solitude, however. The hermitage gets a steady stream of visitors coming to “enjoy the view, to pray and to talk”, cautions the advert on Saalfelden’s website.

“The applicants need to know that the Saalfelden hermit does not lead a lonely life. Many people come and want to confide in someone. He has to be there for them,” Moser said.

The previous hermit, former priest and psychother­apist Thomas Fieglmuell­er, returned to Vienna after just one season – the hermitage is only open from April to November – to write.

“Life in the hermit’s cell is spartan but the nature is very beautiful. I met lots of nice people and had good conversati­ons,” he told the Salzburger­Nachrichte­n daily.

And another thing to bear in mind for those applying – by post only – in time for the March 15 deadline: the job is unpaid.

“We have already had several enquiries, but no formal candidates so far,” Moser said.

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