The Ghostly Shoes of Hindelbank: A Mother’s Journey Beyond the Grave
After her husband forgot to bury her with shoes, a woman came back to haunt him as she was condemned to wander the realm of the dead barefoot.
Moon Mausoleum
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After her husband forgot to bury her with shoes, a woman came back to haunt him as she was condemned to wander the realm of the dead barefoot.
After her husband forgot to bury her with shoes, a woman came back to haunt him as she was condemned to wander the realm of the dead barefoot.
In the Emmental area in the heart of Switzerland, where the rolling green hills cradle the village of Hindelbank, an old belief once echoed through the valleys: if a woman died before her newborn child had reached six weeks of life, her soul would not find peace.
Read More: Check out all ghost stories from Switzerland
Condemned to walk barefoot over thistles and thorns in the shadowy realm of the dead, she would be forced to suffer for the unfinished bond of motherhood. Unless, of course, the living remembered to offer her one final gift that were her shoes.

This is a ghost story found in P. Keckeis, M. Waibel, Legends of Switzerland. Bern, Zurich 1986, and tells about this eerie custom from Switzerland. Although said to have been a tradition or folklore, there isn’t much information to go on about the subject to back it up.
It was said that placing a deceased mother’s shoes in her coffin would ease her painful journey through the underworld, where the spirits of mothers wandered among nettles and barbs until their children were out of danger as they feared for their souls. The Limbo of Infants is the hypothetical permanent status of the unbaptised who die in infancy, too young to have committed actual sins, but not having been freed from original sin in Catholicism.
There have been many debates about this part, and there have also been a lot of folklore talking about how to combat it. But in the quiet village of Hindelbank, this final act of compassion was tragically forgotten.

After a young mother passed away suddenly, her grieving husband was left to mourn with his infant child. Distraught and overwhelmed, he buried his wife without the customary footwear. Soon after the funeral, a strange sound disturbed his nights with sharp, persistent knocking at the window, always around midnight. No matter how he searched, no one was ever found outside. Yet the knocking returned, again and again, growing more insistent with each passing night.

Desperate and frightened, the man finally confided in his neighbors. The woman was likely trying to reach him, not in malice, but in pain. Her feet were bare. Her soul could not rest. “Place her shoes at the window,” they told him, “and she will take them.”
That very evening, he did as instructed. He retrieved her shoes and placed them gently on the windowsill. When morning came, the shoes were gone. And the knocking never returned.












From: P. Keckeis, M. Waibel, Legends of Switzerland. Bern, Zurich 1986.