What exactly is the Bahnhofsmission? What do they do and who uses their services?



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I was changing trains at Frankfurt Hbf and it was a a bit cold outside (close to 0°C). I asked at the information desk if there was any heated waiting area, and they told me this was only available at the Bahnhofsmission at platform 1, door 7. I walked over there. The door was closed (I don't know if it was locked) but there was a bell and I could see light and people inside, but they did not look like travellers. I did not ring.



What is the function of the Bahnhofsmission? From their website, it appears to be a charity with a broad scope, but rather for people in trouble than for a traveller who would appreciate a bit of warmth. Is it only for emergencies? What do they actually do?










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  • 2




    Haven't you answered your own question? At UK stations waiting rooms have been replaced by cafes. Although many are just stalls without a seating area. I suggest making yourself scarce in a nearby hotel.
    – Weather Vane
    Dec 6 '17 at 21:58






  • 2




    I've never had anything to do with them but from their page it seems like their services differ from train station to train station. However, they say they help people looking for a place to rest or to stay. I don't know whether there are any conditions on that but asking would be certainly worth a try.
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 22:31










  • I find the whole Frankfurt Hbf rather warm even in winter and even tho it is very open, but as long as you are under the big dome it feels like it is somewhat climated
    – XtremeBaumer
    Dec 8 '17 at 12:04










  • @WeatherVane no he hasn't. It's unclear whether it's only open to travelers with a valid ticket, homeless people, anyone in need. Makes a difference. Hamburg Hbf. used to be full of sleeping junkies locked in at night. Whether the Bahnhofsmission is safe, let alone a good idea, would depend a lot.
    – smci
    Dec 9 '17 at 1:06
















up vote
56
down vote

favorite
3












I was changing trains at Frankfurt Hbf and it was a a bit cold outside (close to 0°C). I asked at the information desk if there was any heated waiting area, and they told me this was only available at the Bahnhofsmission at platform 1, door 7. I walked over there. The door was closed (I don't know if it was locked) but there was a bell and I could see light and people inside, but they did not look like travellers. I did not ring.



What is the function of the Bahnhofsmission? From their website, it appears to be a charity with a broad scope, but rather for people in trouble than for a traveller who would appreciate a bit of warmth. Is it only for emergencies? What do they actually do?










share|improve this question

















  • 2




    Haven't you answered your own question? At UK stations waiting rooms have been replaced by cafes. Although many are just stalls without a seating area. I suggest making yourself scarce in a nearby hotel.
    – Weather Vane
    Dec 6 '17 at 21:58






  • 2




    I've never had anything to do with them but from their page it seems like their services differ from train station to train station. However, they say they help people looking for a place to rest or to stay. I don't know whether there are any conditions on that but asking would be certainly worth a try.
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 22:31










  • I find the whole Frankfurt Hbf rather warm even in winter and even tho it is very open, but as long as you are under the big dome it feels like it is somewhat climated
    – XtremeBaumer
    Dec 8 '17 at 12:04










  • @WeatherVane no he hasn't. It's unclear whether it's only open to travelers with a valid ticket, homeless people, anyone in need. Makes a difference. Hamburg Hbf. used to be full of sleeping junkies locked in at night. Whether the Bahnhofsmission is safe, let alone a good idea, would depend a lot.
    – smci
    Dec 9 '17 at 1:06












up vote
56
down vote

favorite
3









up vote
56
down vote

favorite
3






3





I was changing trains at Frankfurt Hbf and it was a a bit cold outside (close to 0°C). I asked at the information desk if there was any heated waiting area, and they told me this was only available at the Bahnhofsmission at platform 1, door 7. I walked over there. The door was closed (I don't know if it was locked) but there was a bell and I could see light and people inside, but they did not look like travellers. I did not ring.



What is the function of the Bahnhofsmission? From their website, it appears to be a charity with a broad scope, but rather for people in trouble than for a traveller who would appreciate a bit of warmth. Is it only for emergencies? What do they actually do?










share|improve this question













I was changing trains at Frankfurt Hbf and it was a a bit cold outside (close to 0°C). I asked at the information desk if there was any heated waiting area, and they told me this was only available at the Bahnhofsmission at platform 1, door 7. I walked over there. The door was closed (I don't know if it was locked) but there was a bell and I could see light and people inside, but they did not look like travellers. I did not ring.



What is the function of the Bahnhofsmission? From their website, it appears to be a charity with a broad scope, but rather for people in trouble than for a traveller who would appreciate a bit of warmth. Is it only for emergencies? What do they actually do?







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asked Dec 6 '17 at 20:20









gerrit

24.8k981198




24.8k981198







  • 2




    Haven't you answered your own question? At UK stations waiting rooms have been replaced by cafes. Although many are just stalls without a seating area. I suggest making yourself scarce in a nearby hotel.
    – Weather Vane
    Dec 6 '17 at 21:58






  • 2




    I've never had anything to do with them but from their page it seems like their services differ from train station to train station. However, they say they help people looking for a place to rest or to stay. I don't know whether there are any conditions on that but asking would be certainly worth a try.
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 22:31










  • I find the whole Frankfurt Hbf rather warm even in winter and even tho it is very open, but as long as you are under the big dome it feels like it is somewhat climated
    – XtremeBaumer
    Dec 8 '17 at 12:04










  • @WeatherVane no he hasn't. It's unclear whether it's only open to travelers with a valid ticket, homeless people, anyone in need. Makes a difference. Hamburg Hbf. used to be full of sleeping junkies locked in at night. Whether the Bahnhofsmission is safe, let alone a good idea, would depend a lot.
    – smci
    Dec 9 '17 at 1:06












  • 2




    Haven't you answered your own question? At UK stations waiting rooms have been replaced by cafes. Although many are just stalls without a seating area. I suggest making yourself scarce in a nearby hotel.
    – Weather Vane
    Dec 6 '17 at 21:58






  • 2




    I've never had anything to do with them but from their page it seems like their services differ from train station to train station. However, they say they help people looking for a place to rest or to stay. I don't know whether there are any conditions on that but asking would be certainly worth a try.
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 22:31










  • I find the whole Frankfurt Hbf rather warm even in winter and even tho it is very open, but as long as you are under the big dome it feels like it is somewhat climated
    – XtremeBaumer
    Dec 8 '17 at 12:04










  • @WeatherVane no he hasn't. It's unclear whether it's only open to travelers with a valid ticket, homeless people, anyone in need. Makes a difference. Hamburg Hbf. used to be full of sleeping junkies locked in at night. Whether the Bahnhofsmission is safe, let alone a good idea, would depend a lot.
    – smci
    Dec 9 '17 at 1:06







2




2




Haven't you answered your own question? At UK stations waiting rooms have been replaced by cafes. Although many are just stalls without a seating area. I suggest making yourself scarce in a nearby hotel.
– Weather Vane
Dec 6 '17 at 21:58




Haven't you answered your own question? At UK stations waiting rooms have been replaced by cafes. Although many are just stalls without a seating area. I suggest making yourself scarce in a nearby hotel.
– Weather Vane
Dec 6 '17 at 21:58




2




2




I've never had anything to do with them but from their page it seems like their services differ from train station to train station. However, they say they help people looking for a place to rest or to stay. I don't know whether there are any conditions on that but asking would be certainly worth a try.
– martin.koeberl
Dec 6 '17 at 22:31




I've never had anything to do with them but from their page it seems like their services differ from train station to train station. However, they say they help people looking for a place to rest or to stay. I don't know whether there are any conditions on that but asking would be certainly worth a try.
– martin.koeberl
Dec 6 '17 at 22:31












I find the whole Frankfurt Hbf rather warm even in winter and even tho it is very open, but as long as you are under the big dome it feels like it is somewhat climated
– XtremeBaumer
Dec 8 '17 at 12:04




I find the whole Frankfurt Hbf rather warm even in winter and even tho it is very open, but as long as you are under the big dome it feels like it is somewhat climated
– XtremeBaumer
Dec 8 '17 at 12:04












@WeatherVane no he hasn't. It's unclear whether it's only open to travelers with a valid ticket, homeless people, anyone in need. Makes a difference. Hamburg Hbf. used to be full of sleeping junkies locked in at night. Whether the Bahnhofsmission is safe, let alone a good idea, would depend a lot.
– smci
Dec 9 '17 at 1:06




@WeatherVane no he hasn't. It's unclear whether it's only open to travelers with a valid ticket, homeless people, anyone in need. Makes a difference. Hamburg Hbf. used to be full of sleeping junkies locked in at night. Whether the Bahnhofsmission is safe, let alone a good idea, would depend a lot.
– smci
Dec 9 '17 at 1:06










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
57
down vote













The Bahnhofsmission (train station mission, mission in the religious sense) is over 100 years old and began as a Christian network to help out young girls moving into the cities who were searching for work and were prone to be exploited for low/unpaid work or prostitution. Train stations were hot points for social problems because they connected and still connect people coming from everywhere.



The Bahnhofsmission tries to help everyone (!) with everything (!) without looking at their backgrounds and uses both staff and volunteer workers. It starts by you asking them for a pencil, for a map, or for a warm place and it ends with support if your train is out of order, the train had an accident, or you are the victim of a crime. As a Christian organisation, it is supported by both by Roman Catholic and the German Protestant churches. For this reason, you can expect a religious environment: bible and crosses. As clarified in the comments, this does not mean that they try to evangelise,
they simply want to convince by action, not by words. They will gladly talk about their background and the Christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.



enter image description here



Logo of Bahnhofsmission



Given the extremely broad mission (essentially they are do-it-all) and the different people involved, it is often quite perplexing because you can find beggars, stranded people, and normal tourists. It is also said without a word that more important problems are tackled first, so, if you only need information, it could take some time.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2




    From the last sentence in your second paragraph one could think they are trying to missionize, however the wikipedia article says "Religiös motivierte Seelsorge steht nicht immer im Vordergrund, sondern eher praktische Handreichungen ungeachtet der eigenen Weltanschauung; gleichwohl sind Kreuz und Bibel durchaus in einer Bahnhofsmission zu finden."
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:15






  • 5




    I cannot deduce this conclusion from my description. It uses the word mission, but the idea is: less words, but more action. Show, not tell. They will tell you about their background and talk about the christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.
    – Thorsten S.
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:23






  • 8




    Note that I used could think and not deduce, because it's more of a pragmatical issue and people reading your answer (again: not everybody) might be wondering why you mention this. So I thought it was worth pointing out that there's nothing to be scared of and nobody will be forced to pray or to be baptized.
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:31







  • 1




    @MichaelKjörling I mean ehrenamtlich which means you do the work for your own convinction without payment (You may get some presents or small sums of money, but it is not your sustenance.
    – Thorsten S.
    Dec 7 '17 at 20:08






  • 1




    @ThorstenS. ehrenamtlich means "voluntary", not "honorary".
    – errantlinguist
    Dec 8 '17 at 10:17

















up vote
12
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As Thorsten pointed out in his answer, the Bahnhofsmission is a charity. From their historical origins, they have become one of the main sources of support for those homeless people who do not want to deal with the welfare bureaucracy for some reason.



Some travelers may not feel comfortable with the other applicants in a Bahnhofsmission, especially if there are language barriers. But if you have a problem and you can't/won't solve it by spending money (e.g. on a taxi and a hotel bed) going there could be a good idea.






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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

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    active

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    up vote
    57
    down vote













    The Bahnhofsmission (train station mission, mission in the religious sense) is over 100 years old and began as a Christian network to help out young girls moving into the cities who were searching for work and were prone to be exploited for low/unpaid work or prostitution. Train stations were hot points for social problems because they connected and still connect people coming from everywhere.



    The Bahnhofsmission tries to help everyone (!) with everything (!) without looking at their backgrounds and uses both staff and volunteer workers. It starts by you asking them for a pencil, for a map, or for a warm place and it ends with support if your train is out of order, the train had an accident, or you are the victim of a crime. As a Christian organisation, it is supported by both by Roman Catholic and the German Protestant churches. For this reason, you can expect a religious environment: bible and crosses. As clarified in the comments, this does not mean that they try to evangelise,
    they simply want to convince by action, not by words. They will gladly talk about their background and the Christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.



    enter image description here



    Logo of Bahnhofsmission



    Given the extremely broad mission (essentially they are do-it-all) and the different people involved, it is often quite perplexing because you can find beggars, stranded people, and normal tourists. It is also said without a word that more important problems are tackled first, so, if you only need information, it could take some time.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 2




      From the last sentence in your second paragraph one could think they are trying to missionize, however the wikipedia article says "Religiös motivierte Seelsorge steht nicht immer im Vordergrund, sondern eher praktische Handreichungen ungeachtet der eigenen Weltanschauung; gleichwohl sind Kreuz und Bibel durchaus in einer Bahnhofsmission zu finden."
      – martin.koeberl
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:15






    • 5




      I cannot deduce this conclusion from my description. It uses the word mission, but the idea is: less words, but more action. Show, not tell. They will tell you about their background and talk about the christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.
      – Thorsten S.
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:23






    • 8




      Note that I used could think and not deduce, because it's more of a pragmatical issue and people reading your answer (again: not everybody) might be wondering why you mention this. So I thought it was worth pointing out that there's nothing to be scared of and nobody will be forced to pray or to be baptized.
      – martin.koeberl
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:31







    • 1




      @MichaelKjörling I mean ehrenamtlich which means you do the work for your own convinction without payment (You may get some presents or small sums of money, but it is not your sustenance.
      – Thorsten S.
      Dec 7 '17 at 20:08






    • 1




      @ThorstenS. ehrenamtlich means "voluntary", not "honorary".
      – errantlinguist
      Dec 8 '17 at 10:17














    up vote
    57
    down vote













    The Bahnhofsmission (train station mission, mission in the religious sense) is over 100 years old and began as a Christian network to help out young girls moving into the cities who were searching for work and were prone to be exploited for low/unpaid work or prostitution. Train stations were hot points for social problems because they connected and still connect people coming from everywhere.



    The Bahnhofsmission tries to help everyone (!) with everything (!) without looking at their backgrounds and uses both staff and volunteer workers. It starts by you asking them for a pencil, for a map, or for a warm place and it ends with support if your train is out of order, the train had an accident, or you are the victim of a crime. As a Christian organisation, it is supported by both by Roman Catholic and the German Protestant churches. For this reason, you can expect a religious environment: bible and crosses. As clarified in the comments, this does not mean that they try to evangelise,
    they simply want to convince by action, not by words. They will gladly talk about their background and the Christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.



    enter image description here



    Logo of Bahnhofsmission



    Given the extremely broad mission (essentially they are do-it-all) and the different people involved, it is often quite perplexing because you can find beggars, stranded people, and normal tourists. It is also said without a word that more important problems are tackled first, so, if you only need information, it could take some time.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 2




      From the last sentence in your second paragraph one could think they are trying to missionize, however the wikipedia article says "Religiös motivierte Seelsorge steht nicht immer im Vordergrund, sondern eher praktische Handreichungen ungeachtet der eigenen Weltanschauung; gleichwohl sind Kreuz und Bibel durchaus in einer Bahnhofsmission zu finden."
      – martin.koeberl
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:15






    • 5




      I cannot deduce this conclusion from my description. It uses the word mission, but the idea is: less words, but more action. Show, not tell. They will tell you about their background and talk about the christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.
      – Thorsten S.
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:23






    • 8




      Note that I used could think and not deduce, because it's more of a pragmatical issue and people reading your answer (again: not everybody) might be wondering why you mention this. So I thought it was worth pointing out that there's nothing to be scared of and nobody will be forced to pray or to be baptized.
      – martin.koeberl
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:31







    • 1




      @MichaelKjörling I mean ehrenamtlich which means you do the work for your own convinction without payment (You may get some presents or small sums of money, but it is not your sustenance.
      – Thorsten S.
      Dec 7 '17 at 20:08






    • 1




      @ThorstenS. ehrenamtlich means "voluntary", not "honorary".
      – errantlinguist
      Dec 8 '17 at 10:17












    up vote
    57
    down vote










    up vote
    57
    down vote









    The Bahnhofsmission (train station mission, mission in the religious sense) is over 100 years old and began as a Christian network to help out young girls moving into the cities who were searching for work and were prone to be exploited for low/unpaid work or prostitution. Train stations were hot points for social problems because they connected and still connect people coming from everywhere.



    The Bahnhofsmission tries to help everyone (!) with everything (!) without looking at their backgrounds and uses both staff and volunteer workers. It starts by you asking them for a pencil, for a map, or for a warm place and it ends with support if your train is out of order, the train had an accident, or you are the victim of a crime. As a Christian organisation, it is supported by both by Roman Catholic and the German Protestant churches. For this reason, you can expect a religious environment: bible and crosses. As clarified in the comments, this does not mean that they try to evangelise,
    they simply want to convince by action, not by words. They will gladly talk about their background and the Christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.



    enter image description here



    Logo of Bahnhofsmission



    Given the extremely broad mission (essentially they are do-it-all) and the different people involved, it is often quite perplexing because you can find beggars, stranded people, and normal tourists. It is also said without a word that more important problems are tackled first, so, if you only need information, it could take some time.






    share|improve this answer














    The Bahnhofsmission (train station mission, mission in the religious sense) is over 100 years old and began as a Christian network to help out young girls moving into the cities who were searching for work and were prone to be exploited for low/unpaid work or prostitution. Train stations were hot points for social problems because they connected and still connect people coming from everywhere.



    The Bahnhofsmission tries to help everyone (!) with everything (!) without looking at their backgrounds and uses both staff and volunteer workers. It starts by you asking them for a pencil, for a map, or for a warm place and it ends with support if your train is out of order, the train had an accident, or you are the victim of a crime. As a Christian organisation, it is supported by both by Roman Catholic and the German Protestant churches. For this reason, you can expect a religious environment: bible and crosses. As clarified in the comments, this does not mean that they try to evangelise,
    they simply want to convince by action, not by words. They will gladly talk about their background and the Christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.



    enter image description here



    Logo of Bahnhofsmission



    Given the extremely broad mission (essentially they are do-it-all) and the different people involved, it is often quite perplexing because you can find beggars, stranded people, and normal tourists. It is also said without a word that more important problems are tackled first, so, if you only need information, it could take some time.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 8 '17 at 14:19









    Robert Columbia

    3,81932246




    3,81932246










    answered Dec 6 '17 at 23:03









    Thorsten S.

    14.9k13970




    14.9k13970







    • 2




      From the last sentence in your second paragraph one could think they are trying to missionize, however the wikipedia article says "Religiös motivierte Seelsorge steht nicht immer im Vordergrund, sondern eher praktische Handreichungen ungeachtet der eigenen Weltanschauung; gleichwohl sind Kreuz und Bibel durchaus in einer Bahnhofsmission zu finden."
      – martin.koeberl
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:15






    • 5




      I cannot deduce this conclusion from my description. It uses the word mission, but the idea is: less words, but more action. Show, not tell. They will tell you about their background and talk about the christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.
      – Thorsten S.
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:23






    • 8




      Note that I used could think and not deduce, because it's more of a pragmatical issue and people reading your answer (again: not everybody) might be wondering why you mention this. So I thought it was worth pointing out that there's nothing to be scared of and nobody will be forced to pray or to be baptized.
      – martin.koeberl
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:31







    • 1




      @MichaelKjörling I mean ehrenamtlich which means you do the work for your own convinction without payment (You may get some presents or small sums of money, but it is not your sustenance.
      – Thorsten S.
      Dec 7 '17 at 20:08






    • 1




      @ThorstenS. ehrenamtlich means "voluntary", not "honorary".
      – errantlinguist
      Dec 8 '17 at 10:17












    • 2




      From the last sentence in your second paragraph one could think they are trying to missionize, however the wikipedia article says "Religiös motivierte Seelsorge steht nicht immer im Vordergrund, sondern eher praktische Handreichungen ungeachtet der eigenen Weltanschauung; gleichwohl sind Kreuz und Bibel durchaus in einer Bahnhofsmission zu finden."
      – martin.koeberl
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:15






    • 5




      I cannot deduce this conclusion from my description. It uses the word mission, but the idea is: less words, but more action. Show, not tell. They will tell you about their background and talk about the christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.
      – Thorsten S.
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:23






    • 8




      Note that I used could think and not deduce, because it's more of a pragmatical issue and people reading your answer (again: not everybody) might be wondering why you mention this. So I thought it was worth pointing out that there's nothing to be scared of and nobody will be forced to pray or to be baptized.
      – martin.koeberl
      Dec 6 '17 at 23:31







    • 1




      @MichaelKjörling I mean ehrenamtlich which means you do the work for your own convinction without payment (You may get some presents or small sums of money, but it is not your sustenance.
      – Thorsten S.
      Dec 7 '17 at 20:08






    • 1




      @ThorstenS. ehrenamtlich means "voluntary", not "honorary".
      – errantlinguist
      Dec 8 '17 at 10:17







    2




    2




    From the last sentence in your second paragraph one could think they are trying to missionize, however the wikipedia article says "Religiös motivierte Seelsorge steht nicht immer im Vordergrund, sondern eher praktische Handreichungen ungeachtet der eigenen Weltanschauung; gleichwohl sind Kreuz und Bibel durchaus in einer Bahnhofsmission zu finden."
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:15




    From the last sentence in your second paragraph one could think they are trying to missionize, however the wikipedia article says "Religiös motivierte Seelsorge steht nicht immer im Vordergrund, sondern eher praktische Handreichungen ungeachtet der eigenen Weltanschauung; gleichwohl sind Kreuz und Bibel durchaus in einer Bahnhofsmission zu finden."
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:15




    5




    5




    I cannot deduce this conclusion from my description. It uses the word mission, but the idea is: less words, but more action. Show, not tell. They will tell you about their background and talk about the christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.
    – Thorsten S.
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:23




    I cannot deduce this conclusion from my description. It uses the word mission, but the idea is: less words, but more action. Show, not tell. They will tell you about their background and talk about the christian idea if you are curious and interested, but if you don't want to be bothered with that, they won't bother you.
    – Thorsten S.
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:23




    8




    8




    Note that I used could think and not deduce, because it's more of a pragmatical issue and people reading your answer (again: not everybody) might be wondering why you mention this. So I thought it was worth pointing out that there's nothing to be scared of and nobody will be forced to pray or to be baptized.
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:31





    Note that I used could think and not deduce, because it's more of a pragmatical issue and people reading your answer (again: not everybody) might be wondering why you mention this. So I thought it was worth pointing out that there's nothing to be scared of and nobody will be forced to pray or to be baptized.
    – martin.koeberl
    Dec 6 '17 at 23:31





    1




    1




    @MichaelKjörling I mean ehrenamtlich which means you do the work for your own convinction without payment (You may get some presents or small sums of money, but it is not your sustenance.
    – Thorsten S.
    Dec 7 '17 at 20:08




    @MichaelKjörling I mean ehrenamtlich which means you do the work for your own convinction without payment (You may get some presents or small sums of money, but it is not your sustenance.
    – Thorsten S.
    Dec 7 '17 at 20:08




    1




    1




    @ThorstenS. ehrenamtlich means "voluntary", not "honorary".
    – errantlinguist
    Dec 8 '17 at 10:17




    @ThorstenS. ehrenamtlich means "voluntary", not "honorary".
    – errantlinguist
    Dec 8 '17 at 10:17












    up vote
    12
    down vote













    As Thorsten pointed out in his answer, the Bahnhofsmission is a charity. From their historical origins, they have become one of the main sources of support for those homeless people who do not want to deal with the welfare bureaucracy for some reason.



    Some travelers may not feel comfortable with the other applicants in a Bahnhofsmission, especially if there are language barriers. But if you have a problem and you can't/won't solve it by spending money (e.g. on a taxi and a hotel bed) going there could be a good idea.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      12
      down vote













      As Thorsten pointed out in his answer, the Bahnhofsmission is a charity. From their historical origins, they have become one of the main sources of support for those homeless people who do not want to deal with the welfare bureaucracy for some reason.



      Some travelers may not feel comfortable with the other applicants in a Bahnhofsmission, especially if there are language barriers. But if you have a problem and you can't/won't solve it by spending money (e.g. on a taxi and a hotel bed) going there could be a good idea.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        12
        down vote










        up vote
        12
        down vote









        As Thorsten pointed out in his answer, the Bahnhofsmission is a charity. From their historical origins, they have become one of the main sources of support for those homeless people who do not want to deal with the welfare bureaucracy for some reason.



        Some travelers may not feel comfortable with the other applicants in a Bahnhofsmission, especially if there are language barriers. But if you have a problem and you can't/won't solve it by spending money (e.g. on a taxi and a hotel bed) going there could be a good idea.






        share|improve this answer












        As Thorsten pointed out in his answer, the Bahnhofsmission is a charity. From their historical origins, they have become one of the main sources of support for those homeless people who do not want to deal with the welfare bureaucracy for some reason.



        Some travelers may not feel comfortable with the other applicants in a Bahnhofsmission, especially if there are language barriers. But if you have a problem and you can't/won't solve it by spending money (e.g. on a taxi and a hotel bed) going there could be a good idea.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 7 '17 at 6:16









        o.m.

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