Wednesday 1 December 2010

Walking with an insatiable monster

The basic traffic rules are defined by the 1968 Vienna Convention on Road Traffic. However, not all countries are signatory to the convention and, even among signatories, local variations in practice may be found. Yet it is universal accepted that the motor car is king, and woe betide anyone or anything that comes in its way - you or it will be crushed - so don't even think of crossing the road, and don't come in my way.

I'm reminded of several recent pilgrimages when in France, Italy, Spain it was often necessary to walk on motorways and other dangerous high speed roads, cross all types of roads, negotiate incomplete road infrastructure: bridges, overpasses, underpasses, and such like. I ask how it is that walkers that 'come in the way of vehicles,' and not the other way around. The international treaty states,

... drivers are expected to avoid a collision with ... pedestrians, regardless of whether or not the applicable rules of the road allow them to be where they happen to be.

I applied that principle and survived, and furthermore was never apprehended by police and other authorities for walking on motor ways and other high speed roads.  Yet I expected to be arrested, several times, by passing police but never was. Amazing!

The international community has created an insatiable monster and is largely unaware of the scale. Let's face it, the invention of the motor car is a world-wide disaster and getting worse by the minute, and appears unstoppable. Millions of people are killed, maimed, injured, hurt. Vast tracts of land are destroyed by a coating of asphalt. Cars spew out pollutants in ever increasing numbers. Cars are noisy. Cars are a nuisance. Cars are horrible! Oil and raw materials are the basis for the invasion and colonising of foreign lands.

What is even worse is that humans are not even psychologically evolved to own and operate motor cars. As soon as humans steps inside their motorcars all possibilities of a peaceful coexistence with other road users (motorists, cyclists, walkers) are immediately lost. It’s war! The motorists’ caveman brain leads to  territorial behaviour the moment any aspect of their space is in some way threatened: symbolically or otherwise, and must be defended aggressively. The primitive brain takes  unrealistic risks on the open road, and denies the reality of likely death and injury to self and others, and the sheer wanton waste of precious and finite resources – humans included.

Sunday 17 October 2010

Continue to Jerusalem, Israel in 2011

It was my plan to continue to Jerusalem, Israel from Rome, Italy in 2009, and again this year. I'm now committed for next year and need to pick-up the planning and organising once again in earnest.

I was dealing with two extreme emotions whilst on the Cami de Llevant: never again - it's time to hang up my boots; and don't die with regret for not having followed through on this project. I don't want to be disappointed for not having done or at least attempted this pilgrimage. I must recognise and accept my feelings as they are, and simply feel. May I meet the challenges of this upcoming pilgrimage with wisdom and courage.

Sunday 3 October 2010

Google alerts

Google Alerts are emails sent to you when Google finds new results that match your search term(s). You can use Google Alerts to monitor anything on the Web.

I use the Google Alert service primarily for all things pilgrimage: Camino de Santiago de Compostela; Camide de Llevant; Rome to Jerusalem. Le Via Francigena. I look forward with some anticipation to the daily emails that include web pages, newspaper articles, blogs, videos, discussion groups, and such like. I recommend this service - it’s tremendous.

Sunday 26 September 2010

A Mark Twain quote

Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbour. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover. - Mark Twain

Pilgrim Office website: the Peregrination to Santiago

The Pilgrim Office in Santiago de Compostela, Spain has an interesting website with lots of information, advise, pilgrim numbers and other details. Its a great place to while away on for information, comparative pilgrim numbers, demographics, and such like.

During the month of May 2010, I was one of 28,787 pilgrims who were received at the Pilgrim's Office. Valencia as a starting point is not mentioned nor is the Cami de Llevant, for that matter. The numbers for this route are tiny compared to the other routes, and that makes the Cami de Llevant even more recommendable for a host of reasons.

Friday 10 September 2010

Snap-lock resealable storage bags

When on the road, it is essential to be well organised, and ensure that all documents (e.g., passports, credit cards, itineraries, maps, guidebooks, and such like) and other items (particularly cash and electronics) are safely and  securely stored, and protected from the elements and prying eyes.

For this, I rely on snap-lock resealable storage bags that are available in a variety of sizes: 15cmx9cm, 18cmx17cm, 22cmx25cm, 35cmx27cm, for example. They are inexpensive, light-weight, rugged, and ultimately invaluable. And, in most cases they replace other types of storage. Receipts, business cards, brochures, souvenirs, random pieces of paper that I tend to collect as I travel all go in those plastic envelopes, for future reference and action. I also carry a few spares in different sizes.

Friday 3 September 2010

Expressions of interest

Woodend Neighbourhood Centre

47 Forest Street, Woodend, Victoria 3442
T: 03 5427 1845
F: 03 5427 4027
E: wnci@netcon.net.au

Do you enjoy walking 24-km and longer distances?
If you do, please register to form a walking group.

I will welcome you!

Sunday 29 August 2010

A daily prayer

The Pilgrim Prayer

Guardian of my soul,
guide me on my way this day.
Keep me safe from harm.
Deepen my relationship with you,
your Earth, and all your family.
Strengthen your love within me
that I may be a presence of your peace
in our world.
Amen
- Tom Pfeffer and Joyce Rupp

Reference
Joyce Rupp Walk in a Relaxed Manner: Life Lessons from the Camino

You may to want to use this prayer on your journey.

Wednesday 25 August 2010

A brief history of the via Francigena

I began the via Francigena on Friday 23 May 2008 from my home in north London and walked to Trafalgar Square to link with St Martin-in-the-Fields’ annual pilgrimage to Canterbury cathedral, and continued with my companions to Dover and crossed the English Channel by ferry to Calais. The journey ultimately crossed France, Switzerland to arrive at the Great Saint Bernard pass and crossed into Italy to continue through Aosta to finish on Friday 22 August 2010 at the Basilica of St Peter.

This amazing journey followed more or less directly in the footsteps of Sigeric the Serious Archbishop of Canterbury (989-994) who went to Rome in 989 to receive his cope and pallium (a circular band of white wool with pendant, worn by archbishops) from the hands of the Pope, as was customary for that period. Sigeric on his way home recorded the places he passed through identifying them as 'submansiones'. The manuscript of that journey is kept in the British Library and became the focus for academic research and the re-creation of this modern-day pilgrimage route that  became known as the via Francigena. The Archbishop's description of the route proved accurate although the 10th century names differed in many instances from their modern ones.

Reference
Babette Gallard  (2010) Lightfoot Companion to the Via Francigena. Pilgrimage Publications

Tuesday 24 August 2010

Pilgrim group Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

If you're a pilgrim or for that matter a budding one or have an interest in pilgrimage and reside in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia or thereabouts you may be interested in an informal group that gathers on the 4th Friday of each month to dine in a restaurant. The central Melbourne location changes each month.

Contact: Garis Alexander <garis.alexander*gmail.com> (replace * with @)

Where can you turn to for pilgrim advise and information?

I would suggest the following resources:

Begin with the venerable Confraternity of Saint James. Take a look at my websites: Pilgrimage, Retirement, Immigration and other Odd Ideas; Walking the Cami de Llevant: a Spanish Coast to Coast; and Confraternity of Pilgrims to Jerusalem.

Google and Bing search will produce excellent results.

Google search tip: Add 'at' (sans quotes) to your Google search for site specific results. Whereas, I use Mozilla Firefox 3.6.8 with UrlbarExt 1.6.1 which extends the Location Bar with a set of commands that includes 'site specific search'.

Of course, if you have any specific questions then contact me, by all means. I would be glad to help.

Monday 23 August 2010

Classes, workshops and individual consultancies for Australians and New Zealanders wishing to walk the camino

I was searching the net for Australian pilgrims and groups and found that the:

CAMINO DOWNUNDER presents classes, workshops and individual consultancies for Australians and New Zealanders wishing to walk the great pilgrimage routes of France and Spain which have been in existence since the 9th century, to Santiago de Compostela in north western Spain.

That's interesting, and may be of benefit to some.

Thursday 5 August 2010

Men who wear socks with sandals

Men who wear socks with sandals: what are they thinking? I observed male pilgrims following a shower would dress and put on socks and sandals regardless of the weather conditions. I was bemused, and more so when these same men would question my sock-less naked feet when wearing Birkenstock sandals. No man should wear socks with sandals. (Women maybe?) Sandals are for bare naked sock-less feet!

Saturday 31 July 2010

Walking to pilgrimage

I have always enjoyed walking - especially repetitive long-distance walking. I became interested in the Camino de Santiago some 12 years ago. I read some articles on the Camino, there was a documentary on television that excited me, and I met two pilgrims who had recently returned from Santiago de Compostela, Spain who spoke about their experiences. My wife and I became members of the Confraternity of St James and attended an open day and listened and learned from knowledgeable speakers and mingled with experienced and budding pilgrims. We decided to become pilgrims and pored over maps of France and Spain and chose Le Puy-en-Velay, France as our starting point. We negotiated some extended leave, purchased our back-packing kits and guidebooks, and made our way to Le Puy-en-Velay. We attended Holy Mass in the cathedral, and the kindly bishop sent us on our way with his blessing and gifts. That was a memorable moment.

2000, The cathedral of Le Puy-en-Velay, France to the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela to finish at the Faro de Finisterre. The route GR65 (Grande Randonee) passed through Conques, Figeac, Cahors and Moissac before reaching St Jean-Pied-de-Port in the foothills of the Pyrenees, and in Spain through Roncesvalles, Pamplona, Puente la Reina, Estella, Logroño, Burgos, León, Astorga, Ponferrada and Sarria before it reached the “City of the Apostle”.

2002, Winchester cathedral, Hampshire, England to Le Mont Saint-Michel, Normandy, France. The route passed through Portsmouth and by ferry to Cherbourg, Barfleur, the Normandy coast, to Saint-Mere-Egise, and Genets on the north shore of the bay that was crossed with a guide to the iconic Le Mont Saint-Michel.

Notes
In the Middle Ages Barfleur was one of the chief ports of embarkation for England.
1066 - A large medallion fixed to a rock in the harbour marks the Norman departure from Barfleur before the Battle of Hastings.
1120 - The White Ship, carrying Prince William, only legitimate son of Henry I of England, went down outside the harbour.
1194 - Richard I of England departed from Barfleur on return to England following his captivity by Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor.
6 June 1944 - Normandy Landings

2005, Saint Cuthbert's Way from Melrose Abbey to Lindisfarne (Holy Island) off the coast of Northumberland.

2007, Camino Portugués from the cathedral of Porto, Portugal to the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela.

2008, Le via Francigena to Rome, Italy. I began from my home in north London and walked to Trafalgar Square to link with St Martin-in-the-Fields’ annual pilgrimage to Canterbury cathedral and continued to Dover and by ferry to Calais - crossed France, Switzerland (followed the north shore of Lac Léman) to arrive at the Great Saint Bernard pass and crossed into Italy and continued through Aosta to Rome to finish at the Basilica of St Peter.

8 April 2010, Cami de Llevant runs from the cathedral of Valencia via Albacete, Toledo, Avila, Toro, Zamora, Ourense to the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela to finish at the Faro de Finisterre, once again.

Thursday 29 July 2010

My potential to enjoy the gifts of life in Australia

I'm an emigrant! My family: mum, dad, and five kids emigrated to Australia in 1954. Of course, I also emigrated to the United Kingdom, and once again to Australia in 2008.

After a long spell in the United Kingdom, I found it hard to settle, adjust, and adapt to living in Australia, and that was a letdown, and a matter of some concern. Should I return to London? However, my journey on the Cami de Llevant changed that. I returned home ready to put-down some roots, and integrate as best I can. I'm slowly finding like-minded people, and my potential to enjoy the gifts of life in Australia and that of a loving relationship. That has not changed my love for London and its amazing people. Not at all!

Spain's Catalonia region voted to formally ban bullfighting.

A victory for animal welfare activists - Spain's Catalonia region on Wednesday 28 July 2010 voted to formally ban bullfighting with affect from 1 January 2012. This follows the lead of the Canary Islands that made bullfighting illegal in 1991.

Wednesday 28 July 2010

What is it that binds pilgrims together on the Camino de Santiago?

The Camino de Santiago is a community of spirit among pilgrims, a peace brought by the simplicity of that life, and a common goal, that binds us together. The Camino, with its winding roads and footpaths, offers respite from the business of modern existence. It provides an opportunity to reappraise our direction, and helps us shift to a more evolved state.

The Camino allows time away from the familiar and habitual so that new insights can be revealed. A wider perspective opens up, where we begin to realise who we are and what we came here to do. Each day is lived in the simplicity of the Way where we travel at a more natural pace. This allows time to witness the rising sun, the landscape that surrounds us with its array of fauna and flora. We proceed towards the welcome that awaits us at the day’s end where the hospitalero (a term from which we get the word hospitality) of the next albergue greets us.

Mindful walking is a form of meditation that reminds us of the divinity within ourselves and all life. The passing landscape of Spain reminds us of that spirituality that connects us, irrespective of our differing religions and philosophies. We find ourselves in the company of like-minded community of nomadic people. The Camino de Santiago transcends our differences to unite us in an eclectic bond of openness and shared values.

Many pilgrims’ stories contain a hint of letdown or anticlimactic feelings at the end of the journey. It’s hard to return home without being a changed person. You return to your “regular life”, and struggle to re-integrate into your previous daily routine. Some manage to after a short while, whilst others make radical and drastic life changes. The Camino de Santiago redefines ourselves by pushing our limits, challenging our beliefs, and learning about ourselves.

La Mancha

The peerless Camino passes through La Mancha - a vast elevated plateau of Spain. I read that it is variously arid and fertile. However, during the course of our journey it was wet and in places almost impassable due to flooding.

And, yes we did pass by the very windmills made famous by Miguel Cervantes' Don Quixote de La Mancha, and I did very much enjoy the many sculptural representations of the chivalrous, romantic hero and his squire Sancho Panzo and beloved Dulcinea.

Placido Domingo's singing Don Quixote continues to ring in my ears:

Hear me now
Oh thou bleak and unbearable world,
Thou art base and debauched as can be;
And a knight with his banners all bravely unfurled
Now hurls down his gauntlet to thee!
I am I, Don Quixote,
The Lord of La Mancha,
My destiny calls and I go,
And the wild winds of fortune
Will carry me onward,
Oh whithersoever they blow.
Whithersoever they blow,
Onward to glory I go!

Galicia, Spain

We were in Galicia and walking through a terrain of mountains, lonely gravel footpaths, lakes, teeny railway lines and tunnels in the far distance, abandoned villages, grazing horses and cows, and lush flora of all possible shades of green. Splendid. I asked my Spanish companion for the name of this national park. He replied that we were in Galicia. I said, 'I know that, but what is the name of this national park?' He said that it did not have national park status. It's my view that if ever a region deserves national park status it is that pristine and stunning region of Galicia through which the peerless Camino passes. If you the reader should ever choose to walk this route you're in for a treat.

Tuesday 27 July 2010

How would pilgrims with special dietary needs fare on the Camino

I have previously written about my life as a committed vegetarian, and the difficulties I encountered on the Camino in Spain as a solo pilgrim surrounded by unremitting carnivores - difficulties that at times drove me to despair. That started me thinking about people with special dietary requirements (e.g., gluten, egg, wheat free diets),  and those with religious dietary requirements, and how they would fare on pilgrimage in Spain. I don't have an answer or a solution. Except, that groups of people with special dietary needs would fare better than if alone. Spanish society is too traditional to cater for such people, particularly if alone, of that I'm certain, and that's unfortunate. Not even in the cities. That's my experience, and I stand to be corrected, as always.

Accessing accommodation on the Camino

A passport or similar document and the credential duly stamped is mandatory to access municipal, religious, private accommodation on the Camino. Municipal accommodation involved Policia Local or Ayuntamiento personnel or both in some instances to gain access to albergues and sport facilities and such like (but not in Galicia).

I recall my first day from Valencia to Algemesi which was a distance 38.0-km, and maybe much more. It was late when I arrived in Algemesi; I was exhausted and went around in circles to find the albergue to be told to register with the Policia Local. My passport was photocopied, I completed an extensive document, and the police officer at the front desk all along appeared to be making criminal types of enquiries about me by telephone. That was daunting. I was escorted back to the albergue by two police officers. All the while, I was dealing with my tiredness, hunger, and dehydration. I remember that episode clearly. That incident tested my resolve, patience, commitment.

Leave your prepaid or plan mobile 'phone at home and buy a cheap one for use in Spain

I carried a prepaid mobile 'phone from Australia for use in the United Kingdom and Spain. However, I quickly discovered that prepaid 'phones don't work abroad, and that was a nuisance, to state the obvious. One of my first tasks in Valencia was to buy a prepaid mobile 'phone. I turned to Vodafone and the staff were terrific and they sold me a LG for €20.00 and did all the online registration which took some time to complete against a backdrop of  twitchy customers waiting to be served.

Take my advise, leave your prepaid or plan mobile 'phone at home and buy a cheap one for use in Spain. You will need to produce your passport for the registration process. There are ample places to top up on the Camino.

Monday 26 July 2010

Church spires

My first day began from the Cathedral of Valencia, and I quickly and surprisingly discovered that the route, in fact, led from church to church, just as a caravan route leads from oasis to oasis. That feature of the route was not pointed out to me by the meeting of the  Asociación Amigos Camino de Santigo Comunidad Valenciana (and should have been), and that morning was my introduction to the guidebook and collection of maps having purchased them the previous evening. The churches and their spires on that early first stage were well within my line of sight as I went along and they helped with navigating around all kinds of construction obstacles blocking my progress. I'm certain that the task would have been more difficult without church spires as navigation aids. Churches and their spires remained an important navigation feature and aid throughout this rather tough pilgrimage.

Church spires, of course, were not always within my immediate line of sight as usually they were spaced far apart but they always were a most welcoming sight indicating that the day's destination was almost within reach. However, there were times, when I was weary, when the church appeared unreachable, and appeared to resist me reaching it. Of course, churches were the marker for the location of the Plaza Major: bars, municipal offices, police, accommodation, information, and such like. Churches proved a useful reference (if the name was known or that of the place) to quote when asking for information or requesting confirmation for being on track. That was equally important as a psychological boost particularly when doubt was starting to creep in. Praise for the builders of Spain’s churches!

Sunday 25 July 2010

People I met on the camino

It was early Sunday morning: dark, cold, wet, drizzly, and there was not an open bar to be found. Yet we were in good spirit but yearning for breakfast. Gerrit began by insisting that there were two route possibilities. He studied his guidebook endlessly and obsessively. A cursory glance at my reference did not support his conjecture. Yet, he was unable to drop the idea, and all the while we followed way marks that indicated otherwise. A shepherd offered us temporary shelter from the elements and furthermore confirmed that we were on the right track. Yet Gerrit maintained his two route position: that we were not on the 'true' camino, and that had a wearing effect on my patience.

Gerrit told me that he had completed the Via de La Plata in 2009, and had carried president Barack Hussein Obama II's photograph on that journey. It was a 'please get me out of here' moment. Gerrit was a man of 59 years who stated that Obama would solve all the world's 'problems'. (The 'problems' were never defined or elaborated on despite my best efforts for his clarification.) How could an educated, professionally trained architect carry a photograph of Obama and believe such utter nonsense that could only end in bitter disappointment, denial or whatever. I viewed Gerrit as a total nutter, and decided that our camino relationship would best be truncated in the interest of my well-being, and ultimately lasted some 4 weeks.

I recall two particular elections that ended in bitter disappointment following brief moments of joyful elation: the 1972 election that ended 23 years of conservative government in Australia. The incompetent Labour government of Gough Whitlam was eager to make long-planned reforms, although it struggled against a lack of experience in its cabinet of silly tossers; and the United Kingdom election of 1997. The Labour Party, under Tony Blair's leadership, won with 418 seats, the most the party has ever held.

Australia has a compulsory voting system. I do not intend to cast a vote on 21 August 2010. I have two options: not attend the polling place and incur a fine; or attend the polling place and spoil my ballot papers to avoid a fine. I will probably choose the latter option.

Friday 23 July 2010

Celebrating my birthday on the Camino during holy year

Although, I remain uncertain of the point for doing so, I nevertheless celebrated my 67th birthday on the Camino during holy year. It was, in no small way, a celebration for having made it so far because of my resilience or what ever that allows me to continue forward however temporarily or briefly that may be. And, to proclaim my potential to further enjoy the gifts of life such as another loving relationship, in particular. I have no delusions of immortality  - none at all, and I'm acutely aware of the meaninglessness and arbitrariness of a cold, impersonal, and often hostile universe that remains beyond my understanding.

May I offer love, knowing that I cannot control the course of life, suffering, or death and be open to the true nature of life.

Walking alone or with a companion(s)

When on pilgrimage or a long-distance walk, I enjoy walking with a companion(s) but often need space to walk alone with my own thoughts and unfettered from the demands and needs and wishes of others, and my preference is to walk intermittently on my own.  I enjoy my own company and also the company of others and joyful repartee - very much so. I view walking as meditation - walking Zen; step by step I make my way through blue sky temples and white  cloud monasteries. Pilgrimages are among the most demanding, and therefore most rewarding, of all religious disciplines.

I've been searching for over a year for some companions to form a small group to walk from Rome, Italy to Jerusalem, Israel. However, no one has come forward and it's my intention to nevertheless set-off next year, regardless. I'm concerned that if I wait too much longer I may not be able undertake such a journey as I will celebrate my 68th birthday next year. I'm realistic; nevertheless, I would prefer to walk with companions. So be it.

It's not easy following a vegetarian lifestyle

I'm a vegetarian and have been for most of my life. I was a problem child for my sweet mother as I constantly rejected her meat and fish meals. She never understood my needs, and, of course, during the war and immediate post war years there was little choice if any, and we were poor, and that situation also shaped my mum's meals.  Thus from an early age, I rejected meat and fish as repulsive. I have no explanation for that other than that I viewed the killing of animals as abhorrent and that remains my view to this day. Or possibly, there is a physiological explanation as I later discovered in Peter J. D'Adamo's book 'Eat right for your type'.

I recall an invitation by a cousin to visit and stay with them in the Netherlands. I gladly accepted the invitation, and made my position clear to them (which is my normal approach to avoid any difficulties) - please do not serve me meat or fish - I don't eat meat or fish - not at all - not any time - never. I was collected at the railway station and shown to my room. That evening we gathered for a meal, and I discovered that my words were completely and utterly ignored, and wasted on my hosts. I protested to my hostess. She exclaimed that when you are in our house you will do as we do - we eat meat and fish. I got up from the table and went upstairs, gathered my belongings together and left, and returned to London. I later discussed this with other family and non-family people, and I'm convinced that those people are an aberration as most Dutch people are reasonable and accommodating and would respect my dietary wishes.

Similarly, during the course of my recent pilgrimage, there were some pilgrims who often encouraged me to eat dishes that clearly and obviously were meat or fish based. I'm not sure to this day if their motives were pure and that they were interested and concerned in my well-being or if it was an attempt to subvert me or perhaps relieve their own discomfort. I don't know! I do know that it's not easy following a vegetarian lifestyle.

A wrong turn

We were in a hurry, Gerrit especially as he was desperate for a caffeine fix. When we arrived in the village nothing seemed to fit with Gerrit's guidebook. We asked where the bars were and the way to reach the next village on our route - but were unable to reconcile their answers with our guidebooks. Communication difficulties were not new to us but this was somewhat different. Of course, we then began to blame them for their lack of knowledge. Finally, after going about in circles we discovered a bar in a cluster of terrace houses, and there was nothing to indicate that it was there. Our host was a friendly man and when we laid out our maps in front of him we realised our error - we had somehow strayed from the camino  - we were in a village not on the pilgrim route. It became clear that these people were unaccustomed to having pilgrims asking tricky questions. Of course, it would have paid dividends had we asked for the name of the village, in the first place, and that was a powerful lesson that I frequently applied in practice. Anyhow, with some help we figured a revised route to get us back on track.

Our revised route involved negotiating a tricky section of motorway to return to the camino, and all was well again. When we arrived at the village a wedding celebration was in train and that involved deafening explosions of a magnitude that would make any military proud. The people were out and about in their fineries and the men, women, and children looked spectacular. We found a cosy bar and our hostess prepared a fabulous meal for us. The ambience was pleasant and welcoming.

Thursday 22 July 2010

Vote to ban bullfighting in Catalonia, Spain

After a campaign by the Catalonian public, the regional parliament will vote on 28 July 2010 to decide a bullfighting ban. We want every Catalonian Member of Parliament to know that there are many people around the world who oppose this cruel 'sport'.

This is a historic moment, please sign this petition, before 28 July 2010, to ban bullfighting in Catalonia, Spain.

Tuesday 20 July 2010

My visit to Toledo

We were in Toledo (having arrived the previous evening), and it was on Saturday 24 April 2010. The day began with a breakfast of coffee, thick hot chocolate, and churros (fried-dough pastry-based snacks ideal for dunking and delicious). The bar was in a popular part of the city frequented by bleary-eyed people on their way home, and lots of taxi drivers. That was followed by Holy Mass in the spectacular cathedral and a tour that was outside of the official visiting times, and clearly frowned upon by the officials who became increasingly and obviously twitchy. Next came a bus tour of that spectacular and historical city, and that was a great opportunity to take some splendid photographs.

Around mid-afternoon, we stopped for lunch at a doner cafe and when I reached for my purse to pay the bill it was missing. I have no idea how that came about. (My purse contained a small amount of cash, debit and credit cards, YHA card, and my house key.) I remained calm and decided a course of action:

  1. Retrace my footsteps from our hotel to search for my purse but that was to no avail.
  2. Report this matter to my bank to cancel and replace the cards but retain the personal identity number. However, the replacement cards would be sent to my home address in Australia. Fortunately, my prepaid mobile 'phone had sufficient credit for the rather lengthy call to the United Kingdom to sort this matter. (I kept my fingers crossed.)
  3. Report this matter to the Spanish police. I headed to the nearest Polica Locale to be told that this was a matter for the Policia Nacional. Gerrit and I set-off on a walk that took some 45-minutes, maybe more as it was some distance. I was well received and despite some language difficulties managed to make a statement.

I hoped that my purse would have been found and handed to the competent authorities and that my mobile 'phone would alert me to that but it never did. I did not hear anything more about this matter, and no longer expect any further developments.

We returned to our hotel by bus. My situation was not grave (although it could have been) as I had also packed a credit card from my Australian bank well hidden in my rucksack as well as a stash of some cash.

Monday 19 July 2010

I need my comfort

Every now and then, I will speak of my pilgrimage experiences. And, some are impressed and spellbound, and others will quickly and predictably state that such journeys are beyond them and that they need their "comfort". A little probing will reveal that a major concern is with bed hygiene. They focus on dormitory accommodation and that beds are occupied 365 days per year by a different person: young or old, male or female, unwell or well, white or black or some other shade, and that causes repulsive shudders to reverberate. However, when I stop to ask how that is different for hotel accommodation. Some are visibly shocked when they realise that the realm of starched sheets and fluffy towels hides the reality of bed occupation by total strangers from all walks of life and with all kinds of potential infectious risks. Both situations are liable to health risks. This was minimised on the camino by the issuing of packaged bedding: single use sheets and pillowcase that are binned and properly disposed off on departure. And that's an excellent remedy.

All is well following my fall

Today, I awoke to a frosty morning and clear blue sky – a pleasure to behold. It was one of those great to be alive mornings. I set-off on a walk, and after about a hour, I became aware of a regained freedom of movement that was pain free, and wonderful. I extended my walk to 4 hours and arrived home feeling at ease, and ready to take on another project.

It was Sunday 23 May 2010 and the final day of my 1,290-km journey. I was within sight of Cee (a stunning town on the Atlantic Ocean) and descending a rather steep hill with a tricky loose slippery surface and deep ruts caused by erosion. I had my camera ready to take some snaps of Cee but my view was obstructed by trees and scrubs - I turned to the right to face a gap and my feet shot out from under me, and I landed with a thud - awkwardly, and strained the muscles and ligaments of my upper left leg to the knee and beyond and somewhat less the right one, and damaged my camera in the bargain. The pain was excruciating. Of course, at this point, I only had some 20-km to complete my coast to coast journey and the affects of the fall could not stop that. I hobbled into Cee with my wonderful Spaniard companion and stopped at a bar for some food and drink and swallowed some Ibuprofen capsules to ease the pain.

Within two days, my upper left leg took on the full spectrum of the colours of the rainbow, and the need for rest was indicated. I heeded that advise and avoided strenuous walking and also sitting meditation. However, after some three weeks my leg had not healed and sitting meditation was out of the question. Anyhow, I persevered with a much reduced walk and meditation programme - until this morning. All is well!

Tuesday 13 July 2010

Guidebook and maps from the Asociación Amigos Camino de Santigo Comunidad Valenciana

I carried the excellent guidebook and maps from the Asociación Amigos Camino de Santigo Comunidad Valenciana. The kit is available in Spanish and English, and screams out for some comments. It is unnecessarily bulky as many if not most maps are duplicated, and I had cause on only a few occasions to refer to the separate collection of maps. There is no reason why the full compliment of maps could not appear in the guidebook as most are already in there.

Accommodation information is slim and needs updating. This comment is based on my own experiences and information in other recently published guidebooks.

Distances are not based on town to town centres as is normal convention; rather they are measured from town to town perimeters. (I stand to be corrected.) For example,  the Cebreros - Ávila leg is listed as 37.2-km, and that is a gross underestimate of the overall journey’s length. That was, without doubt, the toughest leg of the entire pilgrimage and involved strenuous ups and downs in addition to the long overall distance. From the edge of Ávila it took more than one hour to reach our albergue, and I recall arriving there utterly and totally exhausted. To avoid any misunderstanding, I recommend that future guide books review the distances published, or at least makes the basis of measurement clear to the reader. That is necessary to plan each day’s journey.

Monday 5 July 2010

Nowhere to hide

Some years ago, I was member of a cult: the  Miracle of Love. It was there that I discovered the intensity of emotions when there is absolutely nowhere to hide. You're on show, exposed, naked - physically and psychologically. I had a similar  experience on the Camino - not as intense - yet, at day's end - I often felt vulnerable, exposed, and ill at ease in the company of fellow pilgrims. I remain perplexed by the arising and fading of these emotions  over which I have little if any control. I began to feel comfortable and at ease only after adjusting and adapting to that ever changing companionship landscape.

Wednesday 30 June 2010

Pilgrims I met: Zamora to Santiago de Compostela to finish at the lighthouse of Finesterre

This section of some 490-km was in stark contrast with the walk from Valencia to Zamora: scenically, socially, physically. I arrived at Zamora from Torro and that was quite a distance to cover, and was struck by the magnificence of the city and glad to be there. The albergue's door didn't open until 3:30-pm and was quickly filled to the rafters with pilgrims, and that aspect of the pilgrimage I had not previously experienced. I observed the competition, urgency, pushing and shoving and the unnecessary elaborate and lengthy registration procedure.

Over the next few days, alliances, friendships were newly formed. My new friends were a collection of Spaniards, Germans, Italians and a mishmash of other nationalities. I found myself adjusting and adapting to these many and different people, and that was great. I was able to learn and build on my Spanish language skills, and teach English.

The albergues in Galicia were excellent and of recent construction and well planned and thought-out. The more recent ones had fully automated light control and there was not a light switch in sight. They were all priced at €4.00.

The route passes through some of the most splendid and spectacular scenery to be found on planet Earth.

Tuesday 29 June 2010

Prepare for inclement weather

I began my pilgrimage on 8 April 2010 and was surprised by the inclement weather on the route. I guess that my romantic idea of Spain as a land of sunshine was unrealistic and erroneous. I did enjoy sunshine and snow on the peaks in Galicia (splendid); however less so the cold, wind, rain, hail, lightning, thunderstorms, floods, river crossings. So be prepared if you also plan to set-off around this time of year. There were several days when my rucksack was empty of clothes as I was wearing them to ward of the cold. I would have enjoyed a pair of gloves and a woolly hat.

If your footwear is not waterproof then take a pair of waterproof breathable socks such as Sealskinz. I did and they were essential for crossing wet and flooded terrain, and they are extremely comfortable. I know walkers in the United Kingdom who wear nothing else - all year round.

I refuse to wear a poncho - they are cheap and nasty and plainly awful, and uncomfortable. I did try a poncho on a walk and stuffed it in a garbage bin, at the first opportunity. I carry a rucksack cover and a brilliant waterproof breathable raincoat, and I'm sure that's the best combination to keep my rucksack and myself dry. And, it works, and looks good. I also used various snaplock bags to store documents and such like, and a pillow protector to store my clothes.

On occasions when no pillows were provided I stuffed my fleece in the pillow protector - to create a great soft comfortable pillow.

Sunday 27 June 2010

Pilgrims I met: Valencia to Zamora

The journey from Valencia to Zamora can be a solitary experience, and may not suit everyone - yet it is fabulous. (It is at Zamora that the Cami de Llevant joins the Vía de la Plata to Santiago de Compostela - a route that is increasingly popular). I truly enjoyed the solitude of walking alone or in the company of Gerrit and others through spectacular scenery, beautiful villages, towns and cities. Of course, the industrial hinterland also forms part of the Spanish landscape, and that's the reality and is unavoidable.

Pilgrim shelter such as albergues, Red Cross facilities, and sport centres often required registration procedures that involved police and local authority officials, and were often difficult to negotiate on Sundays. (But that applied to all aspects of pilgrim life on Sundays.) Whereas religious shelters were straightforward and welcoming with the exception of a convent in Torro that refused entry. The reception there was downright unfriendly and unpleasant until a kind man took me under his wings and took care to ensure I had a bed that night in a hostal. These places were usually comfortable and well-equipped with the exception of sport centres that were basic and minimalistic. Of course, hostals, hotels, pensions and such like are usually available in towns and cities. I never failed to find a bed although there were some difficulties.

I met a total of four pilgrims on that stretch, and they were: Miguel and Anna from San Sebastian, Spain; Gerrit from Jordan, Amsterdam, Netherlands; and Jean Michelle from Lourdes, France – and that was all. I met Miguel and Anna at the Asociación Amigos Camino de Santigo Comunidad Valenciana meeting in Valencia. I tried to accompany them but gave up as my attempts left me gasping by their speed. Jean Michelle never indicated any interest to walk together despite my efforts to engage with him. Whereas Gerrit and I joined forces from around 15 April to 15 May 2010, and we quickly became friends. Of course, we all usually met-up at day’s end in the same accommodation; and shared our experiences, drinks and meals. That was also an opportunity to plan the next day’s walk.

Gerrit’s awkward walking gait followed from a right hip replacement and deteriorating left hip and resulted in uneven shoe wear . He experienced painful and acute foot and leg problems, and did not hesitate to travel by bus when his medical problems were acute but also when his guidebook described some unpleasant aspect(s) of the route or whatever, and there were other reasons and causes for travelling by bus rather than walking. We usually met-up in the evening but that became less frequent. I did not understand his motivation to criticise and disagree with my resoluteness to walk each and every step of the way (which I did), and my fixed daily schedule. However, our separation was inevitable given our different stands on issues. Yet, generally it was a pleasant and supportive experience; and there was the advantage of sharing accommodation to reduce costs. There is much I’m grateful for. Thanks!

Tuesday 22 June 2010

Internet access on the camino

I made a commitment to maintain e-mail contact with family, friends and significant others. However, for the first few weeks that was not possible as I was simply too tired and unmotivated. As my fitness and mental state improved I was continually engaged in a search for Internet access and surprised by the availability, inclusiveness, and helpfulness of the Spanish people. I hardly ever failed to find a computer connected to the Internet.

My pilgrimage experiences

I don't believe much, although I know some things. I'm sceptical, rational, cynical, anti-authoritarian, and the list goes on. Yet, since 2000, I keep returning to pilgrimages and I don't entirely know why.

2000, Le Puy-en-Velay, France to Santiago de Compostela to finish at the lighthouse of Finisterre. The route passed through Conques, Figeac, Cahors and Moissac before reaching St Jean-Pied-de-Port in the foothills of the Pyrenees, and in Spain through Roncesvalles, Pamplona, Puente la Reina, Estella, Logroño, Burgos, León, Astorga, Ponferrada and Sarria before it reached the “City of the Apostle”: 1,800-km

2002, Winchester, England to Le Mont Saint-Michel, France. The route passed through Portsmouth and by ferry to Cherbourg and continued to Barfleur (figures large in English history), the Normandy coast, across Normandy to walk across the bay with a guide to the iconic Le Mont Saint-Michel: ~200-km.

2005, Saint Cuthbert's Way from Melrose to Lindisfarne (Holy Island) off the coast of Northumberland: 100-km.

2007, Camino Portugués from Porto, Portugal to Santiago de Compostela: 232-km.

2008, Le via Francigena to Rome, Italy. I began from my home in north London and walked to Trafalgar Square to link with St Martin-in-the-Fields’ annual pilgrimage to Canterbury and continued to Dover and by ferry to Calais - crossed France, Switzerland (followed the north shore of Lac Léman) to arrive at the Great Saint Bernard pass and crossed into Italy and continued through Aosta to Rome: 2,100-km.

2010, Cami de Llevant runs from Valencia via Albacete, Toledo, Avila and Zamora to Santiago de Compostela to finish at the lighthouse of Finisterre, once again: 1,290-km

-------------------------
In the Middle Ages Barfleur was one of the chief ports of embarkation for England.

1066 - A large medallion fixed to a rock in the harbour marks the Norman departure from Barfleur before the Battle of Hastings.
1120 - The White Ship, carrying Prince William, only legitimate son of Henry I of England, went down outside the harbour.
1194 - Richard I of England departed from Barfleur on return to England following his captivity by Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor.

A Brief History of the Camino de Compostela (the way of St James)

I have always enjoyed walking - especially repetitive long-distance walking. I became interested in the Camino de Santiago some 12 years ago. I read some articles on the Camino, there was a documentary on television that excited me, and I met two pilgrims who had recently returned from Santiago de Compostela, Spain who spoke about their experiences. My wife and I became members of the Confraternity of St James and attended an open day and listened and learned from knowledgeable speakers and mingled with experienced and budding pilgrims. We decided to become pilgrims and pored over maps of France and Spain and chose Le Puy-en-Velay, France as our starting point. We negotiated some extended leave, purchased our back-packing kits and guidebooks, and made our way to Le Puy-en-Velay. We attended Holy Mass in the cathedral, and the kindly bishop sent us on our way with his blessing and gifts. That was a memorable moment.

2000, The cathedral of Le Puy-en-Velay, France to the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela to finish at the Faro de Finisterre. The route GR65 (Grande Randonee) passed through Conques, Figeac, Cahors and Moissac before reaching St Jean-Pied-de-Port in the foothills of the Pyrenees, and in Spain through Roncesvalles, Pamplona, Puente la Reina, Estella, Logroño, Burgos, León, Astorga, Ponferrada and Sarria before it reached the “City of the Apostle”.

2002, Winchester cathedral, Hampshire, England to Le Mont Saint-Michel, Normandy, France. The route passed through Portsmouth and by ferry to Cherbourg, Barfleur, the Normandy coast, to Saint-Mere-Egise, and Genets on the north shore of the bay that was crossed with a guide to the iconic Le Mont Saint-Michel.

Notes
In the Middle Ages Barfleur was one of the chief ports of embarkation for England.
1066 - A large medallion fixed to a rock in the harbour marks the Norman departure from Barfleur before the Battle of Hastings.
1120 - The White Ship, carrying Prince William, only legitimate son of Henry I of England, went down outside the harbour.
1194 - Richard I of England departed from Barfleur on return to England following his captivity by Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor.
6 June 1944 - Normandy Landings

2005, Saint Cuthbert's Way from Melrose Abbey to Lindisfarne (Holy Island) off the coast of Northumberland.

2007, Camino Portugués from the cathedral of Porto, Portugal to the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela.

2008, Le via Francigena to Rome, Italy. I began from my home in north London and walked to Trafalgar Square to link with St Martin-in-the-Fields’ annual pilgrimage to Canterbury cathedral and continued to Dover and by ferry to Calais - crossed France, Switzerland (followed the north shore of Lac Léman) to arrive at the Great Saint Bernard pass and crossed into Italy and continued through Aosta to Rome to finish at the Basilica of St Peter.

Notes
Sigeric the Serious Archbishop of Canterbury (989-994) went to Rome in 989 to receive the 'pallium' (investiture mantle) from the hands of the Pope, as was customary for that period. Sigeric on his way home recorded the journey that later became known as the Via Francigena. The manuscript is kept in the British Library, and was rediscovered in the 1980s by Italian researchers. The Archbishop's description of the route proved accurate although the 10th century names differed in many instances from their modern names.

8 April 2010, Cami de Llevant runs from the cathedral of Valencia via Albacete, Toledo, Avila, Toro, Zamora, Ourense to the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela to finish at the Faro de Finisterre, once again.

1. The mystery of the Camino de Santiago de Compostela (the way of St James)
A history of the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela (City of the Apostle) could ask how the Galician cult of St James transformed into an international one attracting thousands of pilgrims from distant parts of the world. However, the answer was not immediately apparent in the sources I consulted. An answer may be found in the approach by the holy, political, and commercial adopted by the Galician authorities, as in earlier times. These authorities recognise the value of pilgrims to the economy of that autonomous community.

The answer may be found in modern day pilgrim behaviour. For example, what is the passion that drives pilgrims to Santiago? Many return time and time again despite the hardships, deprivations, illnesses, costs that many can ill afford, and often increase the distances of their journeys. On their arrival at the cathedral, pilgrims embrace the statue of St James, and lavish him with hugs, kisses, caresses. Under the main altar of the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, inside a silver urn, is the Tomb of St James. It is allegedly where his mortal remains, together with those of his disciples St Athanasius and St Theodore, rest in peace, and where modern day people sit and pray.

2. Santiago
James and his brother John were the sons of Zebedee, and they were two of Jesus' Apostles. Their mother Salome was related to the Virgin Mary. This James was one of two and possibly three apostles named James, and his Hebrew name was Ya'aqov. The apostles names would have been in the Hebrew-Aramaic language of that time.

Mark 1:19-20
19 When He had gone a little farther from there, He saw James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother, who also were in the boat mending their nets.
20 And immediately He called them, and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired servants, and went after Him.

Matthew 4:21-22
21 Going on from there, He saw two other brothers, James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother, in the boat with Zebedee their father, mending their nets. And He called them,
22 and immediately they left the boat and their father, and followed Him.

The account of St James in Galicia reads like a fable. Soon after Jesus' crucifixion, St James sailed to Galicia and commenced his ministry amongst the people of the Celtic and Iberian Peninsula tribes. (Of course, there is no evidence to support any of this.) He later returned to the Holy Land, and was captured and beheaded by Herod Agrippa I in 44AD. After his martyrdom, St James' body was taken to the coast and placed in a glass boat which guided by angels carried by the wind beyond the Pillars of Hercules (the Strait of Gibraltar) to land near Finisterre, at Padrón, in north-western Spain. The local Queen, Lupa, provided a team of oxen to draw the body from Padrón to the site of a marble tomb that she provided. According to legend, St James was buried there with two of his disciples. And there they lay, forgotten until the 9th century.

Early that century, Pelagius, a hermit lived in that part of Galicia, and had a vision in which he saw a star or a field of stars that led him to an ancient tomb that contained three bodies. He reported this to the local bishop, Theodomir, who declared the remains to be those of St James and his two followers, and in turn reported the find to the King of Asturias, Alphonso II, who forthwith declared St James to be the patron saint of Spain, or of what would eventually be Spain.

A village named Campus de Ia Stella (Field of Stars) and a monastery were established on the site. (Or possibly the Roman word for cemetery, "componere": to bury, is the source.) In any event, news of the discovery spread and a trickle of pilgrims began to arrive. Miracles were attributed to the site, and the miracles encouraged pilgrimage and pilgrimage elicited more miracles. Archbishop Gelmirez of Galicia and the cathedral authorities actively promoted Santiago as a pilgrimage destination, as did the monks of the Abbey of Cluny in France who supported the Spanish Church in its struggle against the Moors on the Peninsula.
There is some historical support for aspects of the story and, on the other hand, there are complications and contradictions. The 1884 Bull of Pope Leo XIII Omnipotens Deus accepted the authenticity of the relics at Compostela, whereas the Vatican remains uncommitted, while continuing to promote the more general benefits of pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela. It is impossible to know whose bones were actually found, and precisely when and how. (But the same can be said about other relics, and perhaps it does not matter.)

The earliest records of visits to the shrine of St James date from the 8th century. This became the most renowned medieval pilgrimage; and the custom of those who carried back with them from Galicia scallop shells as proof of their journey gradually extended to other forms of pilgrimage; for example, the palm of Jericho symbol was the most well recognised pilgrim badge travellers brought back from their journey to Jerusalem. Across France and Spain the pilgrimage routes led from shrine to shrine, just as a caravan route leads from oasis to oasis.

My first day began from the Cathedral of Valencia, and I quickly and surprisingly discovered that the route, in fact, led from church to church, just as a caravan route leads from oasis to oasis. That feature of the route was not pointed out to me by the meeting of the  Asociación Amigos Camino de Santigo Comunidad Valenciana (and should have been), and that morning was my introduction to the guidebook and collection of maps having purchased them the previous evening. The churches and their spires on that early first stage were well within my line of sight as I went along and they helped with navigating around all kinds of construction obstacles blocking my progress. I'm certain that the task would have been more difficult without church spires as navigation aids. Churches and their spires remained an important navigation feature and aid throughout this rather tough pilgrimage.

Church spires, of course, were not always within my immediate line of sight as usually they were spaced far apart but they always were a most welcoming sight indicating that the day's destination was almost within reach. However, there were times, when I was weary, when the church appeared unreachable, and appeared to resist me reaching it. Of course, churches were the marker for the location of the Plaza Major: bars, municipal offices, police, accommodation, information, and such like. Churches proved a useful reference (if the name was known or that of the place) to quote when asking for information or requesting confirmation for being on track. That was equally important as a psychological boost particularly when doubt was starting to creep in. Praise for the builders of Spain’s churches!

According to Spanish legend, St James appeared as a ferocious sword wielding warrior on horseback to help Christian armies in battles against their Muslim foes during the Reconquista. St James is said to have appeared to Christian troops fighting a Moorish army at the Battle of Clavijo in 844, the crusaders rallying to the cry of "Santiago y cierra Espana" - "St James, we will reconquer Spain". His presence was not limited to only the Reconquista. In the Americas St James was also called upon by the Spaniards in their conquest of native peoples.

3. The Middle Ages
Pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela reached its peak during the Middle Ages and constituted a major cultural aspect of that period of history in Europe. By the 12th and 13th centuries, half a million pilgrims made their way to and across northern Spain and back each year. It is likely that many were directed to undertake these journeys  as a form of penance by their priests, acting as God's intermediary.

Thus began the millennium-long relationship between the holy, political, and commercial. An infrastructure developed to support pilgrims and, not coincidentally, to gain profit from them. Roads and bridges were built to draw pilgrims to certain cities and they prospered. Pilgrim hospitals and hospices were chartered by religious orders, and kings and queens. All manner of businesses were established to support pilgrims. The Knights Templar patrolled the Camino, providing protection, places of hospitality, healing and worship, as well as a banking system that became one source of their fabled wealth. Cultures mixed, languages merged and history was affected by these developments.

After its peak, the phenomenon of pilgrimage to Santiago tapered off, and politics, disease, religious, and technological advances were among the likely causes for the decline in pilgrim numbers.

Politics
At the end of the 16th century Spain engaged in wars with both England and France and these affairs effectively cut off access to Spain from elsewhere in Europe. In the 17th century Louis XIV of France forbade his subjects from going to Santiago de Compostela in order to stop trade with Spain.

Disease
The Black Death was one of the deadliest pandemics in human history, peaking in Europe between 1348 and 1350, and is estimated to have killed 30 to 60 percent of Europe's population. It took some 150 years for Europe's population to recover.

Technological advances

The invention of the printing press and the translation of the bible into vernacular languages variously upset and usurped the power of the clergy to instruct or order people to embark on pilgrimages.

Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg was probably the first European to use movable type printing, and in 1454/5 brought out copies of a beautifully executed folio Bible (Biblia Sacra), with 42 lines on each page. The Bible sold for 30 florins each, which was roughly three years' wages for an average clerk. Nonetheless, it was significantly cheaper than a handwritten Bible that could take a single scribe over a year to prepare. After printing the text portions, each book was hand illustrated in the same elegant way as manuscript Bibles from the same period written by scribes.

The Bible has been translated into many languages from the biblical languages of Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek. However, during the Middle Ages, translation, particularly of the Old Testament was discouraged. The churches of the Protestant Reformation translated the Greek of the Textus Receptus to produce vernacular Bibles, such as the German Luther Bible, the Polish Brest Bible and the English King James Bible.

Religion
The Protestant Reformation initiated by Martin Luther around 1520, would have had an effect, being deeply critical as he was of the practice of indulgences, a concept thoroughly intertwined with the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela.

He strongly disputed the claim that freedom from God's punishment of sin could be purchased with money, and confronted indulgence salesman Johann Tetzel with his Ninety-Five Theses in 1517. His refusal to retract all of his writings at the demand of Pope Leo X in 1520 and the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V at the Diet of Worms in 1521 resulted in his excommunication by the pope and condemnation as an outlaw by the emperor.

Luther taught that salvation is not from good works, but a free gift of God, received only by grace through faith in Jesus as redeemer from sin. His theology challenged the authority of the pope of the Roman Catholic Church by teaching that the Bible is the only source of divinely revealed knowledge and opposed sacerdotalism (a belief that priests can act as mediators between human beings and God) by considering all baptised Christians to be a holy priesthood.

His translation of the Bible into the language of the people (instead of Latin) made it more accessible, causing a tremendous impact on the church and on German culture. It fostered the development of a standard version of the German language, added several principles to the art of translation, and influenced the translation into English of the King James Bible. His hymns influenced the development of singing in churches. His marriage to Katharina von Bora set a model for the practice of clerical marriage, allowing Protestant priests to marry.

4. The practice of indulgences
You don't hear about indulgences any more. I certainly never heard anyone speak about indulgences, and it wasn't until I began researching this paper that I recalled my high school studies of Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales and the practice of selling indulgences. The Catholic Church had technically banned the practice of selling indulgences as long ago as 1567. However, in 1960, Pope John XXIII had quietly reintroduced it. Never mind that Martin Luther fired up the Reformation because of them.
During the course of my visits to the cathedral I observed that the confessionals were under utilised suggesting that few people request indulgences, that maybe coincidental with my visits. The plenary indulgence is granted to those who:

  • visit the tomb of St James during a Holy Year and during ordinary years on Easter Sunday; 21 April (the anniversary of the consecration of the cathedral); and on St James' three feast days (23 May - the Apparition; 25 July - his martyrdom; and 30 December - the translation of the relics);
  • confess their sins;
  • attend Mass;
  • pray for the intentions of the Holy Father; and
  • undertake some charitable work (this can include a charitable donation). The indulgence may be gained on behalf of the dead.

A plenary indulgence means that by the merits of Jesus Christ, the Blessed Virgin Mary and all the saints, the full remission of the temporal punishment due to sacramentally forgiven sins is obtained. The person becomes as if just baptised and would fly immediately to heaven if he died in that instant.

5. Pre-Christian history
For the people of the Celtic and Iberian Peninsula tribes – and indeed up until the late Middle-Ages – the Costa da Morte was the last redoubt of explored land, the westernmost part of continental Europe, the final stretch of an itinerary traced in the sky by the Milky Way, a mythical and symbolic place whose most extreme point was pervaded by the impressive mass of cabo Fisterra (Cape Finisterre). It was a place rich in pagan rites and rituals, and an awe-inspiring site for the Romans (2nd century BC) who were struck with wonder when they saw the mighty sun vanish into the sea. The Romans called it Finisterrae (literally the end of the world in Latin) indicates that they viewed it as a place of significance. They built infrastructure, including a road from Bordeaux in modern France to Astorga in north-west Spain over which, in parts, the modern Camino Francés continues to wend its way.

There are those modern-day pilgrims attracted more to the pagan legends associated with the Camino as a spiritual experience rather than the Christian. For example, it is not difficult to view the setting sun as a symbol of death and that the scallop shell (the symbol of St James) resembles the setting sun, and was the focus of Celtic rituals (what ever they were). Thus the Camino may have been a Celtic death journey, westwards towards the setting sun, terminating at the End of the World (Finisterra) on the "Coast of Death" (Costa de Morta). So that the tale of St James rescuing a "knight covered in scallops" maybe a reference to him healing, or resurrecting, a dying (setting sun) knight. (This is purely conjecture on my part.)

6. The modern-day pilgrimage
The route known as the Camino de Santiago is not a single route. There are any number of routes to reach Santiago de Compostela. Today thousands of pilgrims each year set out from their homes, or from popular starting points across Europe. The most popular route is the Camino Francés on which most pilgrims start from either Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port on the French side of the Pyrenees or from Roncesvalles on the Spanish side. Much of the route described in a 900-year old guidebook is still in use today. It is a route that writer James A. Michener calls “the finest journey in Spain, and one of two or three in the world.” He did it three times and mentions passing “through landscapes of exquisite beauty.”

The decline in church attendance coincides with a marked increase in pilgrims walking the Camino de Santiago. Over a period of 25 years pilgrims numbers have increased from 690 in 1985 to 200,000 in 2010 (estimate). Modern-day pilgrims walk for days, weeks or months to reach the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela. A few travel on horseback; and many by bicycle. In addition to people on a religious pilgrimage there are those who walk for non-religious reasons such as for enjoyment, travel, sport or the challenge of walking in a foreign land.  The Camino brings back the critical elements we have lost as we have moved further and further away from more primitive conditions and are as follows: engaging activity (reducing excessive mental rumination); physical exercise; sunlight exposure (Vitamin D supplementation); social support (avoiding isolation); proper sleep.

The modern Camino fundamentally remains the same as it was for medieval pilgrims. It is a  repetitive long distance walk, and at the end of the day, to maintain a healthy body and mind, pilgrims require a comfortable bed, a shower, a toilet, nice nutritious food and thirst quenching drinks, facilities to wash their clothes. The infrastructure is growing and are operated by religious orders, but more commonly by municipalities or associations while others are private businesses. Typical are albergues with bunk beds in dormitories and communal shower and toilet facilities. Of course, pilgrims have access to other types of accommodation.

The modern pilgrim carries a credential which is stamped daily and serves as proof that the route has indeed been walked or cycled. When registering at an albergue, their credential verifies that they are genuine pilgrims. In addition, upon reaching Santiago de Compostela, at the Oficina de Acogida de Peregrinos, pilgrims present the credential to confirm having walked the prescribed distance as walkers or cyclists (the last, westernmost 100-km for walkers or 200-km for cyclists), whereupon they are issued a certificate that certifies their pilgrimage.

7. What is it that binds pilgrims together on the Camino de Santiago?
The Camino de Santiago is a community of spirit among pilgrims, a peace brought by the simplicity of that life, and a common goal, that binds us together. The Camino, with its winding roads and footpaths, offers respite from the business of modern existence. It provides an opportunity to reappraise our direction, and helps us shift to a more evolved state.

The Camino allows time away from the familiar and habitual so that new insights can be revealed. A wider perspective opens up, where we begin to realise who we are and what we came here to do. Each day is lived in the simplicity of the Way where we travel at a more natural pace. This allows time to witness the rising sun, the landscape that surrounds us with its array of fauna and flora. We proceed towards the welcome that awaits us at the day’s end where the hospitalero (a term from which we get the word hospitality) of the next albergue greets us.

Mindful walking is a form of meditation that reminds us of the divinity within ourselves and all life. The passing landscape of Spain reminds us of that spirituality that connects us, irrespective of our differing religions and philosophies. We find ourselves in the company of like-minded community of nomadic people. The Camino de Santiago transcends our differences to unite us in an eclectic bond of openness and shared values.

Many pilgrims’ stories contain a hint of let-down or anticlimactic feelings at the end of the journey. It’s hard to return home without being a changed person. You return to your “regular life”, and struggle to re-integrate into your previous daily routine. Some manage to after a short while, whilst others make radical and drastic life changes. The Camino de Santiago redefines ourselves by pushing our limits, challenging our beliefs, and learning about ourselves.

Revised 3 August 2010

Sunday 13 June 2010

I completed the fourth pillar to be granted my plenary indulgence

This morning, I  attended Sunday Holy Mass, and that was the fourth pillar in order to be granted my plenary indulgence. I had entered into this understanding with the English speaking priest in the confessional of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, Spain.

Tuesday 8 June 2010

To be truly alive

When in Santiago de Compostela, I observed a large party of Japanese tourists being herded onto a coach. I don't think they were truly alive. Whereas, pilgrims walking the Camino to Santiago de Compostela are totally alive, resourceful, determined, vital, and aware of the daily demands of the footpath. The Camino means being alive, alert.

I'm certain that it is this aspect that is missing from daily life, and that brings increasing numbers of people to undertake this modern adventure in contrast to their mundane daily existence. To experience new friends and comrades, to have fun, to receive support, kindness, care from strangers.

Wednesday 2 June 2010

The route from Valencia to Cape Finisterre

The Cami de Llevant’s splendid route takes 42 days to complete but could be extended where there are interim accommodation opportunities. For details see the Asociación "Amigos del Camino de Santiago" Comunidad Valenciana website.

01 Valencia - Algemesí (38.0 km)
02 Algemesí - Xátiva (30.4 km)
03 Xátiva  - Moixent (27.9 km)
04 Moixent - La Font de la Figuera (17.6 km)
05 La Font de la Figuera - Almansa (26.6 km)
06 Almansa - Higueruela (38.4 km)
07 Higueruela - Chinchilla (28.8 km)
08 Chinchilla - Albacete (17.5 km)
09 Albacete - La Roda (39.3 km)
10 La Roda - San Clemente (34.5 km)
11 San Clemente - Las Pedroñeras (23.7 km)
12 Las Pedroñeras - El Toboso (31.2 km)
13 El Toboso - La Villa de Don Fadrique (27.0 km)
14 La Villa de Don Fabrique - Tembleque (29.1 km)
15 Tembleque - Mora (25.0 km)
16 Mora - Toledo (39.5 km)
17 Toledo - Torrijos (33.8 km)
18 Torrijos - Escalona (24.5 km)
19 Escalona - San Martín de Valdeiglesias (26.8 km)
20 San Martín de Valdeiglesias - Cebreros (17.2 km)
21 Cebreros - Ávila (37.2 km)
22 Ávila - Gotarrendura (22.4 km)
23 Gotarrendura - Arévalo (27.4 km)
24 Arévalo - Medina del campo (34.1 km)
25 Medina del campo - Siete Iglesias de Trabancos (25.5 km)
26 Siete Iglesias de Trabancos - Toro (31.5 km)
27 Toro - Zamora (33.7 km)
28 Zamora - Granja de Moreruela (39.4 km)
29 Granja de Moreruela - Tábara (24.5 km)
30 Tabarra - Santa Marta de Tera (23.1 km)
31 Santa Marta de Tera - Mombuey (35.9 km)
32 Mombuey - Puebla se Sanabria (30.7 km)
33 Puebla de Sanabria - Lubián (30.7 km)
34 Lubián - A Gudiña (23.7 km)
35 A Gudiña - Laza (34.4 km)
36 Laza - Xunqueira de Ambia (33.4 km)
37 Xunqueira de Ambia - Ourense (22.7 km)
38 Ourense - San Cristovo de Cea (22.5 km)
39 San Cristovo de Cea - Oseira - Castro Dozón  (20.2 km)
40 Castro-Dozón - Silleda (29.3 km)
41 Silleda - Ponte Ulla (24.0 km)
42 Ponte Ulla - Santiago de Compostela (19.4 km)

Pilgrims hostels are available at Negreira, Olveiroa, and Fisterra (3.0 km before Cape Finisterre). There are a wide range of accommodation opportunities on this route.

43 Santiago de Compostela - Negreira (27.0 km)
44 Negreira - Olveiroa (33.0 km)
45 Olveiroa - Cape Finisterre (30.0 km)

On reaching Santiago de Compostela, Spain

I reached Santiago de Compostela at around 10:30-am, and rushed to secure a bed for two nights at the Albergue Seminario Menor (a single room for €15.00 per night), request the Compostela, to certify my pilgrimage, at the rather crowded Oficina de Acogida de Peregrinos, and most importantly attend the pilgrim holy mass at mid-day.

It was during holy mass that I spoke with a priest, and explained to him my motivation for setting-of on pilgrimage. I asked him for detailed guidance and the steps necessary to be granted a plenary indulgence. These were: confess my sins, receive holy communion, pray, and attend Sunday holy mass. That seemed straightforward.

A plenary indulgence means that by the merits of Jesus Christ, the Blessed Virgin Mary and all the saints, the full remission of the temporal punishment due to sacramentally forgiven sins is obtained. The person becomes as if just baptized and would fly immediately to heaven if he died in that instant.

Two days later I set-off for Cape Finisterre – the end of the earth.

Tuesday 1 June 2010

HH The Dalai Lama

We need to develop a sense of equanimity towards all living beings, expressed through the ability to relate to all others equally. - HH The Dalai Lama

Cabo Fisterra (Cape Finisterre)

For the people of ancient times – and indeed up until the late Middle-Ages – the Costa da Morte was the last redoubt of explored land, the westernmost part of continental Europe, the final stretch of an itinerary traced in the sky by the Milky Way, a mythical and symbolic place whose most extreme point was pervaded by the impressive mass of cabo Fisterra. It was a place rich in pagan rites and rituals, and awe-inspiring site for the Romans (2nd century BC) who were struck with wonder when they saw the mighty sun vanish into the sea.

The pilgrim route to cabo Fisterra is unique in that unlike all others, its starting point is the city of Santiago de Compostela. In my case, the final destination was the cabo Fisterra some 90-km from Santiago de Compostela.

My shoes

My shoes

These are my ASICS - Gel-Trabuco 11 WR trainers with Vasyli orthotic inserts after a walk of 1,290-km. They remain in generally good condition with the exception of the internal heel lining – and, that requires attention by ASICS as an alternative wear resistant material is indicated. The shoes were able to withstand the most horrific off-road walking conditions, and that amazed me in no small measure.

These shoes suit my feet and feel like a pair of well-worn slippers. They are roomy with lots of wiggle room and lightweight, and above all else extremely comfortable. I’m sure that footwear remains a significant problem for many pilgrims. I observed the full range of foot problems and general discomfort they experienced and that was evident by the rush to rid themselves of their shoes at every opportunity. I’m not suggesting that these shoes have a universal application as it’s obvious that feet are unique to each person. Nevertheless when confronted by the scale of misery I observed it’s time that long-distance walkers look outside the box and consider alternatives to the traditional sturdy walking boot.

People in no small measure remain locked-in to the urban myths that surrounds walking footwear, and which manufacturers and others capitalise on. I’m certain that much is fallacious, and results in walkers being harmed.

A visit to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela

Cathedral_0001 Cathedral_0002 Cathedral_0003  Cathedral_0004

My Cami de Llevant testimonivms

My Llevant testimonivms

I completed the Cami de Llevant

I completed the Cami de Llevant on Sunday 23 May 2010 with my arrival at the lighthouse of Cape Finisterre to enjoy the setting sun there. (However, we were rewarded by thick fog and eardrum splitting bellowing fog horns.) The Cami de Llevant was a repetitive long distance walk of 45 days over 1,290-km (not including some well-earned rest days in Toledo and Santiago de Compostela). The route passed like a bright ribbon, spattered with thick mud in parts, through five of Spain's regions: Valencian Community, Castile la Mancha, Madrid, Castile and Leon, and Galicia. That was a true coast to coast pilgrimage that's tough, challenging. However, the joys far outweigh the hardships. I´m not the first to walk the Cami Llevant but I do claim a high probability of being the first vegetarian to do so. That was tough, and I experienced some despair!

Credential

The credential is a record of all places where I stayed overnight (I did not request any stamps from bars and such like). These included: albergues (municipal and private), hostals, sport centres, religious centres (convents and monasteries), hotels. The standard of the accommodation varied considerably as did prices.

Monday 31 May 2010

My Cami de Llevant photo album

My Cami de Llevant photo album is raw as it requires some work to make it informative, and that will take a little while. As such, please consider it work in progress.

Asociación "Amigos del Camino de Santiago" Comunidad Valenciana

My pilgrimage began with a meeting with the Asociación "Amigos del Camino de Santiago" Comunidad Valenciana. I met with Vice President, Luciano Arochena Candame who speaks excellent English. I was well received, briefed, and encouraged; and purchased their newly published English version guide book and credential. The meeting with Luciano set the positive tone for my pilgrimage, and that was important. I recommend that pilgrims embarking on the Cami de Llevant attend a meeting during their stay in Valencia. The contact details for the Asociación are in the right sidebar of this webpage.

Saturday 27 March 2010

Genuine serendipity

Genuine serendipity. I found these marvellous quotations whilst searching the internet this morning.

Travel is a holy journey for pilgrims, loaded with unexpected surprises, mysteries and possibilities that can stir our hearts and bring us spiritual and bodily wholeness. — Leonard J. Biallas

Pilgrims embark on a quest to find the sacred in everyday experiences and transform their selves through deeper connectedness with God, others, and the world. — Leonard J. Biallas

Journeys are occasionally terrifying, sometimes fulfilling, always exciting. What is commonplace at home takes on a new lustre in a foreign land. — Robert McAfee Brown

Allah has laid out the Earth for you like a vast carpet so that you will travel its endless roads. — The Qur'an

All journeys have secret destinations of which the traveller is unaware. — Martin Buber

Our real journey in life is interior it is a matter of growth, deepening, and an ever greater surrender to the creative action of love and grace in our hearts. — Thomas Merton

Saturday 20 March 2010

Documentation

yellow-arrow I read that the Cami de Llevant is well-marked with yellow arrows and other forms of way marks. Yet, these may be absent in certain situations, for a variety of reasons, or totally confusing. I have Gerard Rousse's guidebook "Sur le chemin de Saint-Jacques-de-Compostelle: Le Chemin du Levant". I will call at the Associació "Amigos del Camino de Santiago" Comunitat Valenciana to buy a copy of "The Way of St James from Valencia to Santiago GR-239" an English language guidebook, and their pilgrim credential (credencial). These books include details of accommodation opportunities en route.

Pilgrims carry a credential in which they authenticate their progress by obtaining stamps (sellos) along the way. Stamps can be obtained at hotels and inns, restaurants, bars, churches, museums, city halls, police stations, albergues. So, the credential becomes an amazing decorative record of the journey. The Oficina de Acogida de Peregrinos in Santiago de Compostela advises pilgrims to obtain two stamps per day during the final 100-km if walking or on horseback or the last 200-km if cycling. This also  applies to pilgrims such as myself who start outside the 100 and 200-km limits.

When registering at an albergue, pilgrims are asked for their credential to verify that they are genuine pilgrims walking or cycling the Camino. In addition, upon reaching Santiago de Compostela, at the Oficina de Acogida de Peregrinos, pilgrims can present the stamped credential to confirm having walked the prescribed distance as walkers or cyclists, whereupon they receive a Compostela that certifies their pilgrimage.

Weather and language

I followed Europe's harsh winter with some interest but my recent focus was on Spain. I'm encouraged by Valencia's 5 day forecast: Saturday Chance of Rain 23° C | 12° C; Sunday Chance of Rain 18° C | 8° C; Monday Scattered Clouds 21° C | 8° C; Tuesday Scattered Clouds 18° C | 5° C; Wednesday Scattered Clouds 18° C | 6° C. I expect that the temperature will have risen by a few degrees by the time I set-off. These are ideal walking conditions. 

My reading of the Cami de Llevant stressed that pilgrims would encounter few English speakers on that route and the importance for adequate Spanish language skills. I followed the advise and joined a local Spanish language class. Fingers crossed!

My new blog design

I'm showing of my new blog design and hope you like it. Blogger's  stock set of templates had grown a bit stale. But no longer. They have improved not just template designs, but ways you can customize the look and layout of your blog, and it's easy.

Friday 19 March 2010

Books

So what will I miss when plodding towards the Atlantic Ocean? Books definitely - they are much to heavy to carry! My normal daily routine is walking and reading Australian, British, Irish, US, and global literary award winners and their near miss cousins.

Thursday 18 March 2010

My testimonivms

I’m gripped by the pilgrim bug but my journeys did not begin until 2000 when I walked with my wife to Santiago de Compostela to finish at the lighthouse in Finisterre. Next came a pilgrimage from Winchester to Le Mont Saint Michel followed by the Saint Cuthbert's Way to Lindisfarne (Holy Island) off the coast of Northumberland. I also walked the Camino Portugués to Santiago de Compostela, and more recently La via Francigena to Rome when I began from my home in north London.

Sunday 14 March 2010

Are you sure it's safe to go alone?

I have only been in my small community for 18 months since relocating to Australia from the United Kingdom, and remain very much the 'stranger in our midst'. I enrolled for a Spanish language course to prepare for the Cami de Llevant. Our tutor was interested in our reasons for studying Spanish to better pitch her teaching. Of course, my pilgrimage received considerable interest but even more so because I'm going alone. (I had searched for companions but to no avail.) There were exclamations  of concern: "Are you sure it's safe?" Well, I don't know if it's safe or not. I certainly do not have the capacity or means to predict the future. Only God knows how long I have to live, and on this journey I place myself in his care. Totally!

I follow Shoma Morita's three rules: accept all your feelings, know your purpose(s), and do what needs to be done. Of course, I have been presented with feelings of trepidation, doubt, and such like, and that’s natural. But, I know my purpose and what needs to be done. I'm well prepared, in good health and reasonably fit and strong.  

Saturday 13 March 2010

Why would you a Buddhist embark on a Christian pilgrimage?

Pilgrimages are walking Zen; step by step the practitioner makes his or her way through blue sky temples and white  cloud monasteries. Conducted in the traditional manner - on foot, in old-fashioned garb, carrying no money, accepting whatever comes - pilgrimages are among the most demanding, and therefore most rewarding, of all religious disciplines. (Martin Roth and John Steven, 1985,  p. 108)

I was asked why I, a Buddhist, would want to embark on a 1,200-km “Christian” pilgrimage from Valencia to Santiago de Compostela, Spain. My behaviour is seemingly viewed as incongruent. There are all sorts of reasons, of course, ranging from the sheer physical challenge of such a lengthy undertaking through the cultural/historic considerations to spiritual aspects in it's widest sense. There is  the build-up of inner strength as one day unfolds before the next, seeing new places, meeting new faces, the simplicity of life on the road, pared down to it's bare essentials, solitude, and each or a combination of them are personal to me as they resemble the reasons that lead me to walk the Cami de Llevant.

I had experienced the archetypal yearning to practice the type of embodied spirituality that is to be found by going on pilgrimage. I have a stirring that leads me to want to walk in the footsteps of earlier pilgrims and directly experience holy places. No matter how weak and far from the Christian religion I may feel before going on pilgrimage – during the time on the road I'm changing and experience lightness and freedom despite the hardships and ongoing uncertainties (the availability of nice nutritious vegetarian food is high on my list of ongoing uncertainties), and the monotonous routine of repetitive long-distance walking and daily chores. I explore new horizons. I'm in contact with God.

I have little control over what happens when on pilgrimage (or what happens in the world around me, for that matter). So the pilgrimage is my teacher and I learn to accept what the world does to me. I also learn to free myself from anxiety and how much I can do without. I'm also reminded about how much I don't know why I want to undertake these amazing journeys. An old Zen story captures the spirit of going on pilgrimage.

The wandering monk Fa-yen was asked by Ti-ts'ang, "Where are you going?"
"Around on pilgrimage," said Fa-yen.
Ti-ts'ang asked, "What is the purpose of pilgrimage?"
"I don't know," replied Fa-yen.
Ti-ts'ang nodded and said, "Not knowing is nearest."

Paulo Coelho wrote about his pilgrim experience,

My turning point was my pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela. It was then that I, who had dedicated most of my life to penetrate the 'secrets' of the universe, realized that there are no secrets. Life is and will always be a mystery.

Sunday 28 February 2010

Packing list: Cami de Llevant 2010

I'm aiming for a gross weight of 10-kg excluding food and water
  • 1 pr Asics - Gel-Trabuco 11 WR trainers with Vasyli orthotic inserts
  • 1 pr Birkenstock sandals 
  • 1 pr Convertible trousers with belt
  • 1 Shirt
  • 2 Underpants
  • 2  T-shirts
  • 2 pr Socks (1000 mile)
  • 1 pr Sealskinz waterproof socks
  • 1 Cap
  • 1 Rain coat
  • 1  pr Shorts
  • 1 Fleece
  • 1 Belt (shorts)
  • 1 Montane jacket
  • 1  silk scarf
  • 1 Osprey Aether 70 rucksack and rain cover
  • 1 Daysack
  • 1 Name and address Label
  • 1 Mountain Craft Electron 650 sleeping bag
  • 1 Thermarest Prolite 3 Regular mattress
  • 1 Guide book
  • 1 Credential
  • 1 Spanish phrase book
  • 1 Purse
  • 1 Scallop shell
  • 1 Torch
  • 2 AA batteries
  • 1 Panasonic Lumix DMCTZ3 camera, charger, memory card, convertor
  • 1 Mug
  • 1 Nokia mobile telephone, charger, convertor
  • 1 Compass
  • 1 Alarm clock
  • 1 Pocket knife
  • 1 Spoon
  • 1 Wrist watch
  • 1 USB flash drive
  • 4m Nylon rope
  • Plastic zip bags
  • 1 Spectacle case
  • 2 pr glasses
  • 1 Pen 
  • 1 Notebook
  • 1 Address book
  • 2 Credit card
  • 1 Debit card
  • 1 YHA card
  • 1 Drivers licence
  • 1 IAMAT card
  • 1 NHS card
    1 Medicare card
  • 2 Passports
  • Supplements: aspirin, multivitamin, glucosamine, calcium
  • 1 Toilet bag: soap, shampoo (also for shaving), toothbrush, toothpaste, dental floss, cotton buds, comb, razors, skin cream, nail scissors, tweezers,sun cream, shaving brush
  • First aid kit: various dressing pads and plasters, Ibuprofen caplets, Relief cream, Labello lipcare
  • 1 Microfibre 124x100-cm towel
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Saturday 27 February 2010

My last opportunity to reach the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela during holy year

As in the past, pilgrims reaching the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, Spain during a Holy Year, and fulfilling the conditions for it, are granted a plenary indulgence. According to the Catechism of the Roman Catholic Church, an indulgence is:

The remission before God of the temporal punishment due to sin whose guilt has already been forgiven. A properly disposed member of the Christian faithful can obtain an indulgence under prescribed conditions through the help of the Church which, as the minister of redemption, dispenses and applies with authority the treasury of the satisfactions of Christ and the saints. An indulgence is partial if it removes part of the temporal punishment due to sin, or plenary if it removes all punishment.

This will be my last opportunity to reach Santiago de Compostela and receive a plenary indulgence. I would be too old in 2021 to attempt such a long pilgrimage. As such, on 9 April 2010, I head to the cathedral of Valencia, Spain to start the Cami de Llevant - a journey of 1,200-km.

I'm committed to keep a journal on this occasion. However, keeping a journal is something I've mostly failed to do despite my best and earnest intentions. It simply never seemed important once I hit the road.

Wish me ‘Bon Camino’!

Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section!