I was recently reminded of our universal commonality when my friend Clementine who blogs at Musings of a Commoner posted some photos of a traditional Philippine Good Friday procession involving floats covered with lights and doll-like statues covered in fabric clothing, jewels, flowers and other ornaments. The figures reminded me so much of statues I saw while walking the Camino de Santiago de Compostele across northern Spain.
Virgin of the Stars in a museum in Carrion de los Condes, Palencia, Castile-Leon |
Since earliest humans walked the earth, we have been travelling and sharing and intermingling our respective ways of life - not always in a friendly way - again - the colonialism example! Again I look to my experiences walking the Camino de Santiago in 2009 as a learning experience about how small the world really is and how much we all have in common. And how true Ecclesiastes is where it says "there is nothing new under the sun."
Camino: that way. |
Here's the basic story of the pilgrimage. The Path of Saint James, or el Camino de Santiago de Compostele is one of several routes that criss-cross Europe to reach the westernmost point of land on the European continent: the village of Finisterre, or Fisterra, which name comes from the Latin: end of the earth. Ancient peoples considered it a holy place because it was where the sun fell off the edge of the earth - back when it was believed to be flat.
When Rome was expanding, her soldiers tromped their way across Spain building arrow-straight roads and "civilizing" (oppressing) the so-called "savages" who were the indigenous Spanish people minding their own business in the north.
Atapuerca, UNESCO World Heritage Site on the Camino, where archeological evidence of the earliest known Hominins of western Europe have been found. |
The Cathedral at Santiago de Compostele. |
Even in big cities like Burgos, you can't get lost if you follow the yellow arrows. |
Santiago depicted more peacefully here as the pilgrim in the Cathedral at Roncesvalles. I can't find the photo but there's statues of him on a horse trampling an unfortunate Moor. |
Though Spanish is no longer spoken or taught in the Philippines, Spain has left a deep and lasting mark on the people, their traditions and attitudes. Having visited both countries, I have had a glimpse into the fabric of one society that has influenced another so profoundly. It's amazing to see the connections between people who have never set foot in each others' lands and who don't even speak the same language.
I'm not going to write about the wrongs and horrors of colonialism here because I'm no expert - I'm just a traveller writing what I see - and I saw much beauty, love, and humanity in both places.
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