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Pilgrimage resonates with Jews as well as Catholics like myself

Modern life can make us feel strangely isolated and suffocated. Walking for spiritual reasons can be a universal balm

August 12, 2021 16:55
Wandering_jew.jpg
5 min read

The legend of the Wandering Jew is about the man who taunted Jesus on his way to the crucifixion. Cursed to walk the Earth until the Second Coming, the Wandering Jew could never attain rest and repose.

I’ve felt a bit like the Wandering Jew myself since last August when I set off on the 1,000-year-old Camino pilgrimage through northern Spain, to escape lockdowns in the UK. With further Covid-related travel restrictions making a return to Britain impractical, I continued on past the city of Santiago de Compostela in northwest Spain that marks the end of the pilgrimage toward the coast, then pivoted south to head towards Lisbon in Portugal, following another Camino route in reverse. As I passed the 2,000-kilometre mark, I began to wonder if my odyssey would ever end.

I’m a Catholic but the experience led to an interview with an American rabbi who hosts a podcast for US-based Spirituality and Health magazine. During our discussion about pilgrimage and walking, the rabbi spoke about the wandering tradition that goes back to Abraham and the migratory aspect that is so central to the Jewish history of being persecuted and seeking refuge. On my Camino, I constantly passed Spanish cities with former Jewish quarters.

Increasing numbers of people are responding to the uncertainty of the age — and, for many, the sense of meaninglessness accompanying it — by packing a rucksack and heading on pilgrimage. “Banking crashes, the rise of populism, seemingly insoluble conflicts and terrifying pandemics individually and collectively are causing us to question the very foundations on which our post-religion twenty-first-century lives are built,” Peter Stanford writes in his book Pilgrimage: In Search of Meaning. “Our belief in what until recently was taken to be inevitable progress of science and humanity — and hence the marginalisation of faith — has been stopped in its tracks.”