woensdag 18 mei 2016

Hathaway walked to Santiago

Pilgrimage and Place showed earlier interest in tourism to places based on books or movies.

Today another example unfolded. The Dutch tv aired the episode Entry Wounds from the Lewis series. Originally 2014 on UK television, may 2016 in The Netherlands.
Lewis once was assistent of Inspector Morse.

(Source Amazon.co.uk)

In the ninth series 'Retired' Robbie Lewis (Kevin Whately) is helping his collegue James Hathaway (Laurence Fox) solving the whodunnit.


LewisHathaway.jpg
(Lewis and Hathaway. Source Wikipedia)


In this first episode of a new season Lewis retired and Hathaway was absent for a long time. Several times Lewis tries to find out what Hathaway did. Well, he passed the inspector exams and walked to Santiago de Compostela.


Besides books like The Pilgrimage (Coelho) or The Camino: A Journey of the Spirit (Shirley MacLaine) movies like 'The Way' (2010) and 'Ich bin dann mal weg' (2015, also book 2006) are famous triggers that induce new hordes of pilgrims flooding the roads to Santiago.



There even is a word for this cultural/heritage enthousiasm: Film Induced Tourism. A prime example is the induced tourism following the Lord of the Rings trilogy in New Zealand.



Movies like Inspector Morse or Lewis are in themselves Film Induced Tourism targets as many people visit Oxford exploring locations associated with the television productions.

(The Oxford of Inspector Morse, Antony Richards, 2007)

I myself visited the dales of Yorkshire once exploring the land of the veterinarian James Herriot (aka Alf Wight) following his books (like All creatures great and small) and television series.

Book Cover

Alf Wight and actor Christopher Timothy

Source: http://www.godsowncounty.co.uk/books-literary-work/james-herriot-of-thirsk-and-askrigg/)


As I'm 'into pilgrimage' my ears pointed hearing about Hathaway's pilgrimage to Santiago in this episode of the series. Two specific aspects gained my attention.

“Well, I wasn’t really travelling, I went for a walk.”
“To Spain?”
“Long walk?”


Hathaway, with his theology studies background and 'walking wikipedia' knowledge, states that he didn't do a pilgrimage, he walked.

OK, whether you're a pilgrim is part of your identity. You walk with your feet, you pilgrimage with your heart. Hathaway needed some time off to figure out if he wanted to be a 'copper' and how he related to this life.

Hathaway also indicates that he didn't reach Santiago, in a village just before Santiago he turned around and walked back. Hathaway perhaps walked from Oxford and perhaps also walked back. And after months of walking he decided not to enter Santiago.
Once I wrote in my blog on a pilgrimage to Santiago: it would be a victory if I didn't reach Santiago. I failed.

Guess what, several authors made up stories of what happened on James Hathaway's travels to Santiago.

See also the blog


Watching the Detectives: Inside the Guilty Landscapes of Inspector Morse, Baantjer and Wallander
Stijn Reijnders, European Journal of Communication, 2009

(Source: Amazon.com)

vrijdag 29 april 2016

Altamira: the cave, the art, the movie

Once upon a time, 30 kilometers west of Santander,
near the village of Santillana del Mar, some 35000 years ago....

Perhaps you remember from early school years mentioning of Lascaux (France) and Altamira (Spain). Famous for their paint art, some of the very first human art.

As I walked the Camino del Norte in 2013, and as I also studied history with special interest in pre-history, how could I not visit this cave on the occasion.
Well, I saw the closed gate of the original cave, but visited the replica. 
By the way, the cave of Lascaux is also closed for public and rebuild in a replica.

  
(Photo: P Kouwenberg)

This movie by Unesco shows the Altamira site.
(2:50)






In 2016 a movie was published on the discovery and the man who devoted his life to the cave.

Directed by Hugh Hudson,
featuring Clément Sibony, Rupert Everett, Javivi, Antonio Banderas


Storyline on imdb:
"Marcelino Sanz de Sautuola y de la Pedrueca, in 1868, accidentally discovered Patheolitic paintings with the help of a hunter named Modesto Cubillas inside Altamira's caves, located in Cantabria, north to Spain. Trying to expose their discovery to the academic world for that they study the paintings, Sautuola crashed against the skepticism and discredit of all experts, who claimed that the caves were false and the paintings made for the own Sautuola, in a effort to get rich. Looking for the truth, Sautuola was the rest of his life fighting to prove that those paintings were real, trying to restore his innocence from the accusations of falsehood launched against him. Written by Chockys"



2016
Trailer Altamira
(1:42)


Music by Mark Knopfler
Here you can hear the title track
(2:58)



A commenter on imdb states that original discovery was done by the poor shepherd Modesto Cubillas. The movie however emphasizes Marcelino Saenz de Sautola. He's the owner of the land, also a powerful family (co-owning Banco Santander) and co-sponsor of this movie.


A full documentary on 

Prehistoric Europeans. People Who Invented Art
Not only cave drawings, but also a flute ;-)

(56:52)





donderdag 31 maart 2016

Walk and Horreo

Sleeping in a Parador is perhaps not the place to sleep along the Camino de Santiago for a usual pilgrim.
But a traditional horreo, that's an option for the pilgrim living traditonal values, right?

Architect Nacho Gias from Madrid rebuilded four traditional horreos along the camino into luxurious 2 person cabins. (66$ a night)

By the end of 2016 two more are planned.




maandag 21 maart 2016

In the picture

As I'm also a photographer, so.. interested.

This entry brings you some great views on pilgrimage and photography, places of worship, places of wanderlust, solitude, fog and snow...


First is the Hajj pilgrimage, the Hajj to Mecca in pictures on The Guardian.



Michael George walked the Camino the Santiago. He walked the Camino Frances the same months I did. So, there are some mutual memories.



Tim Hall visited Varanasi and Allahabad along the river Ganges.



Hu Guoqing made a series, Passage to the heart,
on Buddhist pilgrims on their way to winter Lhasa.

zondag 28 februari 2016

Pilgrimage to Amarnath, pilgrimage to paradise

I would like to introduce the pilgrimage to Amarnath. A famous Shiva shrine in Hinduism: an icy stalagmite, the frozen lingam of Shiva.
Recent years the site had over 600.000 visitors/pilgrims a year. A growing number.

This blog entry provides background info, a photo series, several videos of the Amarnath Yatra and a link to an article on some politics and a video on environmental consequences (Paradise has some issues).


Lord Amarnath.jpg
Lord Amarnath by Gangadhar Tambe Wikicommons

Interested in the legend of this perhaps more than 5000 years old shrine, of the pigeons overhearing the secret of immortality Shiva told Parvati? Click here.


The Telegraph published a photo documentary on "Thousands of Hindus make a pilgrimage to Amarnath cave in the Himalayas". You can find it here.






Nirav Patel made following video of touristic visiting.

(2012)
(18:51)



See also the Three minute adventures.
(perhaps turn down music a little)

2008
(3:17)



And the counterpart, great environmental stress.

2011
NDTV
(2:11)



For years now Amarnath is also a political center of a dispute between Kashmiris and the Indian government.
Ian reader in this article: “Hindu nationalist organizations have encouraged Hindus to participate in the Amarnath pilgrimage as a statement of Hindu pride and in order to reinforce Indian claims to the region and to demonstrate their opposition to Pakistan’s counterclaims.”


In 2016 the Amarnath Yatra is from July 2 to August 18.


maandag 8 februari 2016

The Good Friday pilgrimage to Lindisfarne

The Good Friday pilgrimage to Lindisfarne (UK)





For with the flow and ebb, its style
Varies from continent to isle;
Dry shod o'er sands, twice every day,
The pilgrims to the shrine find way;
Twice every day the waves efface
Of staves and sandalled feet the trace.
(Sir Walter Scott)



The beautiful photographs of Christopher Thomond for The Guardian are the reason this item is on the blog.
See all picture here.

The easter walking pilgrimage to Holy Island is an annual event. It was founded in 1976

Interested in crossing along the tidal pilgrim's causeway, click here.

Some background info here.

And a holiday presentation from WitchesSky show you around the place.
(7:56)




Pilgrims walk with crosses as the Northern Cross pilgrimage makes its final leg of the journey to Holy Island, Berwick Upon Tweed, England, Friday, March 29, 2013. For more than 30 years, groups of pilgrims celebrate Easter by crossing the tidal causeway during the annual Christian cross carrying pilgrimage to Holy Island , the pilgrims walk around 100 miles through Northumberland and the Scottish Borders during Holy Week. Scott Heppell, AP


Other Good Friday Pilgrimages are for example the walk to Chimayo:
See this link.

donderdag 21 januari 2016

Randoms 2016January

This blogitem is a random news tour on pilgrimage and place.
Just a few picks around the world from Lhasa, UK, Mecca, Pausanias, Tasmania, Iraq, London, UK again, Jerusalem, Franklin and Japan twice.

Different styles of pilgrimages, different meanings, different places.


Surprise yourself ;-)




Winter pilgrimage in Lhasa

"As the Spring Festival and the New Year on the Tibetan calendar approaching near, Buddhist disciples from all over Tibet have started their winter pilgrimages to Lhasa for pray and worship."
See all pictures here.



The Beatles revisited

A (commercial) pilgrimage to the Beatles cities Liverpool and London. An example of contemporary non religious pilgrimage. But perhaps still sacred.



Mecca for some

"Iranians are no longer allowed to make the pilgrimage to Mecca.In a further escalation in tensions with Saudi Arabia, the Iranian government today banned its citizens from making the annual trip to Islam’s holiest city, a journey required at least once in a lifetime for all Muslims financially and physically capable of doing so."



The ordinary of Pausanias

Huffington Post published an article "Pilgrimage and awe for the ordinary".
"Pausanias, a Greek geographer, was certainly interested in the so-called sacred, but the connections that Pausanias the pilgrim makes between the various locales he visits show how someone can be fascinated by the entirely ordinary or familiar."

2016-01-13-1452647351-8494800-Sounio.JPG


Jacobean Tasmania

"A new Christian pilgrimage in Tasmania's south is being touted as the Southern Hemisphere's answer to Spain's famous El Camino de Santiago."
Complete with the Jacobean scallop!

Pilgrims head off on their two day journey


St Elijah's Monastery of Mosul destroyed

Losing a "reminder of the roots of a religion" and pilgrimage place for centuries.
Have no words...
See articles here and here.


Photo provided to AP by US Army Col Juanita Chang shows St Elijah's Monastery on the outskirts of Mosul, Iraq (1 October 2006)


Gustave Doré's pilgrimage in London

"In 1869, French artist Gustave Doré began an extraordinary collaboration with the British journalist Blanchard Jerrold. Together, over four years, they produced a landmark account of the deprivation and squalor of mid-Victorian London"

Father Thames ... Gustave Doré’s cover illustration for London: A Pilgrimage. The project took four years to complete, featured 180 engravings, and was finally published in 1872.


Also in the UK a 

"Pilgrim completes 'medieval'

journey from Southampton to Canterbury"

He carried however some non medieval items like an ipad...

Steven Payne in full costume


Pilgrimage road to Jerusalem identified?

".. archaeologists Yotam Tepper and Yigal Tepper describe what they believe to be a stone road in Israel on which ancient Jews would make their Jerusalem pilgrimage."

beit-horon


Pilgrimage festival Franklin

"The Pilgrimage concept is based on traversing the musical and cultural influences of Nashville, Memphis, New Orleans, and throughout the Mississippi Delta, finding its home in Franklin."



Pilgrimage Music Festival


88 x Japan

This blog had earlier items on pilgrimages in Japan.
(Click on label Japan and Shikoku on the right for these)
"Japan hopes to follow Camino de Santiago's path to marketing success with 750-mile Buddhist pilgrimage"

34-senior-pilgrims-AP.jpg


Healing pilgrimage in Japan

"The Tamagawa baths, situated in the mountains of Japan’s Akita prefecture, have long been believed to hold medicinal powers. Today, the area attracts cancer patients from all over the country, who hope that the naturally acidic hot springs and radioactive stones might heal them."
See the article and the photographs of photographer 
Tsutomu Yamagata here.