St. James Major (Santiago), 16th Century, Alabaster
Victoria & Albert Museum, London
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The Pilgrimage course, one I greatly enjoy leading, is to be offered at ALRI again in the Spring 2011 term, and I am looking forward to it. As always when a course it repeated, it is a chance to do some additional research and to flesh out ideas and topics covered in the past.
I have been doing some reading about pilgrimages in exotic places including the Shikoku pilgrimage, about 1,300 kms on the island of that name in Japan. The husband of a former student was so kind as to give me a copy of a book I had scan read a long time ago, Japanese Pilgrimage by Oliver Statler (1983. New York: Morrow. ISBN 0688018904). I plan to do enough reading about that fascinating Buddhist trek to comment more intelligently on it in the Spring, having just shown a map and said the route existed the last time I taught the course. I also plan to spend a little time looking further into the Qoyllurití pilgrimage in Peru. If time allows, I would also like to do a little work on pilgrimages in Africa, a part of the world largely ignored in the past editions of the course due to my ignorance.
The year 2010 was a holy year for Santiago de Compostela, and I had hoped to walk at least a part of one of the pilgrimage routes. An ankle injury in last winter's ice and snow made that impossible, but I do hope to be in shape to walk some section of one of the Camino routes this coming autumn. As a consequence I have been doing some reading about routes other than the popular Camino Frances from the Pyrenees to Santiago. Having walked that 800 kms twice, this next time I am considering the possibility of the short Camino Portuguese from Lisboa or perhaps only from Oporto as well as the rugged Camino del Norte (also called the Camino Primitivo) and the spectacular Camino de la Plata from Sevilla via Extremadura through Salamanca and onward to Santiago. The last is the most attractive but also by far the longest (2 months about) and most difficult option.
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