The story of runaway sisters who refused to return to their senior center made headlines across the globe.
The three sisters have lived at the vacant convent at Goldenstein Castle [FILE: September 20, 2025]Image: Joe Klamar/AFP
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A dispute between three elderly nuns who fled a retirement home to return to their abandoned convent has escalated with Roman Catholic authorities.
On Friday, the sisters rejected an offer from church officials to stay in the nunnery "until further notice," on the condition that they and their carers stay off social media.
Christina Wirtenberger, a spokeswoman for the rebel sisters, Bernadette, 88; Regina, 86; and Rita, 82, said they decided not to sign the agreement because it would deprive them of the protection of an interested public.
Nuns on the run — uprising in an Austrian convent
Three Augustinian nuns are refusing to return to the retirement home and are occupying their convent, which has been their home for decades. Despite the dissolution of the convent and church orders, they want to stay.
Image: Joe Klamar/AFP
Home is where the heart is
Sisters Bernadette (center), Regina (left) and Rita are causing a stir with their unusual rebellion — and not just in Austria. The women, who are all over the age of 80, have moved out of their retirement home and gained access to their old convent in Goldenstein near Salzburg, where they lived until two years ago. Now they don't want to leave.
Image: Joe Klamar/AFP
Defying the church
The three Augustinian choir women are defying the orders of the church by occupying the convent. The trio's superior, Provost Markus Grasl, head of the Reichersberg Abbey, has demanded their return to the nursing home — so far without success. The nuns are said to require care and the building is no longer suitable for them. The sisters, of course, see things differently.
Image: Chris Hofer/dpa/picture alliance
Right of residence for life
The three women lived in the convent near the Bavarian border for decades and taught at the affiliated school. After the community dwindled, the convent was dissolved in 2024. It had already been transferred to the Archdiocese of Salzburg and Reichersberg Abbey in 2022. The sisters retained the right to live there, but only as long as it was "justifiable for health and spiritual reasons."
Image: Joe Klamar/AFP
Involuntary move
After stays in hospital, the nuns were transferred to a Caritas home in December 2023. "We couldn't go back to our rooms; the locks had been changed, and we no longer had access to our belongings," recalled Sister Bernadette of the forced move. She herself was once a pupil at the school where she later taught.
Image: Joe Klamar/AFP
Not 'squatters or burglars'
"We don't feel like squatters or burglars," Sister Bernadette told the Kronenzeitung newspaper, explaining that she does not want to live in the nursing home or die there. Their story has now made headlines around the world, and some of the nuns' supporters have even set up an Instagram account for the trio, which now has more than 40,000 followers.
Image: Joe Klamar/AFP
Making headlines
Several people support the nuns in their daily lives and diligently produce social media content for them. Sister Rita is even learning English for her international followers. The account shows the elderly nuns praying, eating or cleaning. It's unclear how the case will proceed, as both sides remain entrenched.
Image: Joe Klamar/AFP
What happens next?
Provost Grasl has not spoken directly with the nuns since they began the occupation. The three nuns, on the other hand, would like to have a constructive discussion. The president of the Federation of Augustinian Nuns, Sister Beate Brandt, told the church media platform katholisch.de: "I cannot tolerate this." The situation at Goldenstein Abbey remains tense.
Image: Joe Klamar/AFP
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Sisters act
The three were the last nuns in residence at the Goldenstein Castle convent.
Two years ago, when the abbot shut down their living quarters in the abbey, they were moved to a retirement home.
They say it was against their will, but church officials deny this.
In September, they ran away from the care home and returned to the abandoned convent near Salzburg in Austria.
Since then, they have documented daily life and have built up a loyal following on Instagram.
Provost Markus Grasl of Reichersberg Abbey then said the nuns should be placed back in a Catholic care home due to their ailing health and accused them of breaking their vows of obedience.
How 3 nuns escaped from an Austrian retirement home
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Why did the nuns reject the Church's offer?
On Friday, church officials, relented and said the sisters could stay at Goldenstein "until further notice."
Under the plan, they would have had to meet several conditions to remain at the convent.
These included the "immediate cessation... of all social media activities" and contact with the media. Furthermore, the nuns must "dismiss lawyers and legal experts working for them with immediate effect."
Church officials also said the sisters would be provided medical care as well as spiritual support from a priest. But if their health worsens and they "can no longer be looked after" appropriately in the convent, they will have to move to a nearby care home, they added.
The Church's promise that the sisters could remain in the convent near Salzburg if they accepted the conditions was only "until further notice" and legally worthless, their spokeswoman said.