Walking the Camino
Page 1
Scribe Publications
WALKING THE CAMINO
Tony Kevin retired from the Australian foreign service in 1998, after a 30-year government career during which he served in the Foreign Affairs and Prime Minister’s departments, and was Australia’s ambassador to Poland and Cambodia. He is currently an honorary visiting fellow at the Australian National University’s Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies in Canberra. He has written extensively on Australian foreign, national security, and refugee policies in Australia’s national print media, and is also the author of the award-winning book A Certain Maritime Incident: the sinking of SIEV X.
To Amy Banson, a true pilgrim
Scribe Publications Pty Ltd
PO Box 523
Carlton North, Victoria, Australia 3054
Email: info@scribepub.com.au
First published by Scribe 2007
Reprinted 2007
This edition published 2008
Copyright © Tony Kevin 2007
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
National Library of Australia
Cataloguing-in-Publication data
Kevin, Tony, 1943-
Walking the camino : a modern pilgrimage to Santiago
New ed.
Carlton North, Vic. : Scribe Publications, 2008.
9781921753831 (e-book.)
Kevin, Tony, 1943-; Travel - Spain; Christian pilgrims and pilgrimages - Spain - Santiago de Compostela; Spain - Description and travel.
203.50946
www.scribepublications.com.au
‘The Passionate Man’s Pilgrimage’
Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,
My staff of faith to walk upon,
My scrip of joy, immortal diet,
My bottle of salvation,
My gown of glory, hope’s true gage,
And thus I’ll take my pilgrimage.
—Sir Walter Raleigh (1604)
Contents
Preface
1 What Am I Doing Here?
2 The Idea of Pilgrimage
3 Setting Off
4 From Granada to Córdoba
5 From Andalucia to Extremadura
6 Spanish Villages
7 Spanish Politics
8 Walking through Extremadura
9 Across Castile to Salamanca
10 Doing Without
11 From Zamora to the Galician Border
12 Into Galicia
13 Walking with God
14 Pilgrimage’s End
15 To Finisterre and Home
Notes
Preface
During eight weeks between May and July 2006, I walked a long diagonal line across much of the map of Spain, from Granada — the last Moorish city-kingdom to fall to the Christian empire, in 1492 — in the far southeast, to the medieval pilgrimage destination of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, in the far northwest. My route took me through four Spanish regions, each with its own distinctive history and cultural identity — Andalucia, Extremadura, Castile, and Galicia. I covered around 1200 kilometres in all, walking most days between twenty and thirty-five kilometres. Usually I walked alone, carrying a sixteen-kilogram rucksack and wooden staff, and without back-up support. It was a challenge for a rather overweight and sedentary 63-year-old man. To my surprise and relief, I completed almost all the intended journey on foot, losing eight kilograms’ weight in the process. I returned home feeling fitter and healthier than for many years.
But this was not just a very long walk. It was a pilgrimage, following the yellow arrow waymarks of the Vía Mozárabe and the Vía de la Plata, two of the many centuries-old pilgrim ‘ways’ (caminos) that crisscross the map of Spain and Portugal in an intricate spider’s web of walking trails, all leading to the one great destination, the cathedral city of Santiago de Compostela. Santiago in the Middle Ages was Europe’s most famous pilgrimage goal, and in recent years it has enjoyed a remarkable and sustained revival of that role. Every morning towards eleven o’clock, hundreds of hot, tired, and dusty pilgrims stream into Santiago Cathedral for the daily pilgrims’ Mass there, and to collect their compostela from the cathedral office, the precious certificate of completion of journey that will be hung proudly on walls back home, along with family photographs and university degrees, as testament to a significant achievement in their lives.
What is this Santiago pilgrimage about, in our frenetically busy and consumption-driven twenty-first century? What drives hundreds of thousands of people of all nationalities and creeds to take time out from their normal lives to walk long, exhausting, and not particularly scenic routes across the cold mountains and hot tablelands of Spain, in order finally to celebrate a medieval Christian liturgy of spiritual renewal and reconciliation with God?
As I farewelled my family and flew out of Australia in May 2006, excited but scared at what might lie ahead of me, I knew I was looking for something in Spain that I had been unable to find at home: some answers to the complexities of life, a circuit-breaker from the growing stress and pain of living in what seemed to be becoming a more selfish and joyless society. I really did not know what Spain would show me. I feared I might not be up to handling it. Most of all, I feared I might not be able to see the point of it.
This book is a personal and impressionistic account of my eight weeks’ continuous pilgrimage walk through Spain. It is not a guidebook or travel diary, but might be of interest to people contemplating a walk to Santiago, as well as to armchair travellers who enjoy reading about unusual journeys from the comforts of home. I have tried here to convey some of the flavour of what it was like to walk each day on the camino from Granada to Santiago. This book is also a look at contemporary Spain, a country that surprised and delighted me in many unforeseen ways. And, unavoidably, because pilgrimage is such a deeply personal experience that has the potential to unlock the deepest recesses of hidden memory, conscience, and aspiration, this book reveals a little about my life and my dreams.
chapter one
What Am I Doing Here?
I am sitting on a carved, granite way-marking stone, at a junction of rough, dirt trails in dry scrubland somewhere in the middle of Extremadura, the hottest and driest region of Spain. It is only eleven in the morning, but the sun is high in the sky and it is already over thirty degrees Celsius. The huge horizon is shimmering, liquifying in the heat. In a couple of hours it will be over forty. It is 28 May, still technically in spring, and all of southern Spain is baking in an unseasonally early summer heat-wave. Maybe it is global warming?
The back of my shirt and my wrists are soaked with sweat. I have walked sixteen kilometres already today, and there are six more kilometres to go before I reach the village of Alcuéscar and its cool refuge of the Residencia de Hermanos Esclavos de María y de los Pobres (the headquarters of the Spanish order of Brothers, Servants of Mary and the Poor), which I have been told contains one of the most comfortable albergues por los peregrinos (pilgrim hostels) in Spain. There are lots of tracks around here, but I won’t get lost, because the reassuringly frequent yellow arrow waymarks point me onto the right direction of the camino at every junction.
I have been walking in Spain for three weeks already. I have walked close enough to 400 kilometres, and there are still 750 kilometr
es to go to reach Santiago, a hard-to-believe dream in my mind of green hills and flowing rivers. Here it is a barren landscape of parched, yellow grassland, dotted with grizzled encina trees, a hardy, local dryland oak. Spanish dry-cured ham, jamón serrano, tastes so special because Spanish pig-farmers let their black pigs out for free-range grazing in this kind of terrain for a few weeks in the autumn, gorging on fallen acorns before they are slaughtered and the hams cured through the cold, dry winters. This gives to the best jamón serrano what maturing in oak barrels gives to wine — a special extra-oaky flavour. The encina trees, seen at a distance, could be Australian eucalypts — with similar leathery, greyish-green leaves and twisted, gnarled trunks and limbs.
I started walking this morning just before dawn, at around six o’clock, from the village of Aljucén, enjoying five precious hours of cool walking. But by now, it is hot — no question. A late breakfast — one warm, squashy ripe pear with a wedge of manchego cheese, a delicious, hard, salty sheep’s cheese from La Mancha province, and the remains of last night’s dinner bread roll, washed down with the last litre of lukewarm water from my two 1-litre flasks, balanced one on each side of my pack. It is not a bad meal after your appetite has been sharpened by five hours on the road. I hope this meal and, more importantly, this water will fuel the final burst of energy that I will need to reach Alcuéscar, waiting somewhere behind those low hills up ahead.
You have to carry two litres of water on the camino, especially on hot days like this when you know there is a long stretch between villages with drinking water. And you have to keep drinking every couple of hours, otherwise it is easy for dehydration to set in before you know it. The warning signs are dizziness, fatigue, and pains in the legs and joints, but by then it’s too late to get your energy back — you will be walking wounded for the rest of the day. I never knew I could make myself swallow so much water when I wasn’t really thirsty. But the more you drink, the lighter the pack gets — and so it is good to stay watered-up.
What am I doing here? Why am I sitting in the blazing sun, in the middle of this harsh, god-forsaken landscape? I might as well be in Arizona or central Australia. This is not the kind of place where sensible people would choose to walk for pleasure. Why am I not at home with my family, enjoying the comforts of suburban Australia — watching football on the telly, reading the papers, getting another cold beer out of the refrigerator? Why is this 63-year-old, overweight, retired man sweating his way across Spain in high summer, lugging a heavy, sixteen-kilogram pack on top of his own ninety-four kilograms, which means 110 kilograms of weight bearing down on four tender sole and heel pads that have been taking the punishment of about 30,000 paces a day, every day over the past three weeks? No wonder I have the biggest and rawest foot blisters I have ever seen.
Yet my completed route already shows up as a satisfyingly long marking-pen trace on my Michelin maps of Spain. It makes me feel that the next 750 kilometres to Santiago might just be feasible, after all. The dream I had a few months ago in Australia, of one continuous walk across Spain from Granada to Santiago, might actually come true.
Maybe it is time to start writing some of this experience down on the camino, before I begin to forget it. It will be hard to recapture the feeling of all this afterwards. With my travel diary entries supplemented by occasional audio reflections on my MP3 player, I just might be able to hold onto some of these memories.
***
El Camino means ‘the Way’. It is the only walking trail that matters in Spain. There are many possible alternative routes for el Camino: all lead to Santiago de Compostela, the famous cathedral city in the far northwest of Spain that is also capital of Galicia, one of Spain’s autonomous communities (regions). Santiago is about 100 kilometres inland from Cape Finisterre, the most westerly point of continental Europe — the place where Europe ends. Fearful ancient and medieval mariners used to believe they would fall off the edge of the world if they sailed out of sight of Finisterre. Santiago is about the same distance south of La Coruña (in British history books, Corunna), the site of a disastrous British army defeat in 1809 during the Napoleonic wars in Spain. General Sir John Moore is buried in La Coruña, and each year a ceremony is held at his gravesite. He was the hero of a doomed British expeditionary force sent to Spain to help guerrillas resisting Napoleon’s invasion. We learned at school a stirring patriotic poem, ‘The burial of Sir John Moore after Corunna’:
Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note,
As his corse to the rampart we hurried;
Not a soldier discharged his farewell shot,
O’er the grave where our hero we buried.
We buried him darkly at dead of night,
The sods with our bayonets turning,
By the struggling moonbeam’s misty light
And the lanthorn dimly burning …
There is a short camino — the Camino Inglés (the ‘English way’) — starting in La Coruña. But most pilgrims from Europe choose to walk the Camino Frances — the ‘French way’, three classic alternative routes from Vezelay, Le Puy, or Arles in France that converge at Roncesvalles in the Spanish Pyrenees into one busy pilgrim trail about 800 kilometres long that then runs due westwards across northern Spain, from Navarre and the Basque region, through the cities of Burgos and León, across the rugged mountains of León and thus finally into Santiago in Galicia. This justly famous route attracts many tens of thousands of pilgrims every year.
But I had chosen a camino far less travelled — the longest, hardest way that I could find, the Vía de la Plata, which starts in Seville in the south. I also opted for a longer feeder variant from Granada, the Vía Mozárabe, which is 400 kilometres long and joins with the Vía de la Plata at the old Roman city of Mérida, 200 kilometres north of Seville and 800 kilometres from Santiago.
My walk had started in Granada three weeks before, and I had just enjoyed two days of resting and sightseeing in Mérida. I had seven more weeks to try to reach Santiago, to collect my compostela (the official certificate of completion of pilgrimage) from the cathedral authorities there before my booked air-flight home. The authorities will check my sellos (overnight accommodation stamps) in my credencial — my ‘pilgrim passport’ — to satisfy themselves that I have truly walked the pledged pilgrimage route. Then it will be home again to the family and normal life.
My passport is already up to its third page of sellos, from churches, town halls, hostals, pilgrim refugios, and bars encountered on my way so far. There is something very satisfying about all the complexities of your life reduced to the simple daily goal of walking twenty to thirty-five kilometres, carrying everything that you own on your back, and having only one target to meet: to get a pilgrim stamp in the travel-record book at the end of each day.
All the sellos count, but the most valued are those from churches or monasteries, for they suggest your walk did have some religious purpose. Lowest in the pecking order are the stamps from bar-restaurants where you ate and drank on the way. As the guidebook delicately puts it, the ecclesiastical authorities in Santiago might not be too impressed by a pilgrim’s credencial that looks like nothing more than evidence of a sustained pub-crawl across Spain. Tonight, I’ll get a suitably prestigious stamp from the brothers in Alcuéscar.
Where did it start, this middle-aged folly? Interestingly, I have not yet met a single Spaniard on the camino who thought me mad or eccentric, or at least those I have met were too polite to say so if they did. The closer I get to Santiago, and the better known is this camino, the less likely that I will. Even in rapidly secularising Spain there seems to be a fondness still for the idea of el camino, and an affection and respect for those who take on its challenge. It is partly about religion, and partly about nostalgia for the old Spain.
The new Spain is a modern country of big cities, factories, and highways with huge lorries and fast cars whizzing by. A pilgrim with his staff and backpack and cockleshell pendant and flop
py sunhat walking along the verges of a Spanish highway is about as anachronistic as a person of similar appearance would be walking along a highway in Britain or the United States or Australia. Sensible Spaniards travel between towns by car or bus or train. Only penniless vagrants or pilgrims would walk along the edges of busy highways.
I rarely met Spanish walking pilgrims. Spaniards on pilgrimage to Santiago seem to prefer the faster and more modern option — doing their camino fast, on sturdy mountain-bikes, laden with heavy saddlebags and dressed in the latest resplendent multi-coloured lycra gear, with snazzy winged helmets and goggles. By superhuman feats of endurance, riding fast over the same rough trails that I am walking, they can complete the 1000 kilometres from Seville to Santiago in incredibly short times (fourteen days, even ten days). It is not my thing — for how could a pilgrim really meditate and let his mind go loose, steering a heavy bike at speed over rough bumpy paths? — but they seem to enjoy it. They come in all shapes and sizes, from super-fit athletic types to potbellied deskbound companions struggling to keep up with the leaders in the group. What they all share is a boundless enthusiasm and loud macho jollity: the bicyclista pilgrims always make their presence seen and heard on arrival in a village.
Coming up the track behind me now are some other, more unusual, pilgrims. Four horsemen, businessmen from Barcelona, are having the time of their lives riding the camino on four elegant Spanish thoroughbreds. I met los quatros caballeros in the pilgrim albergue in Aljucén last night, where they stayed, tethering their horses in the backyard. They are doing it in style, with a back-up carry-van driven by a fifth alternate rider, carrying all their gear and going ahead each day to scout out suitable accommodation and stabling. Riding calmly out of the heat haze towards me in their sleek and creamy Texan hats, they look as if they have just stepped out of a spaghetti Western movie. It’s an efficient operation, as you would expect from a group of well-off restauranteurs and winemakers armed with mobile phones. This year they are riding the first half from Seville to Salamanca. Next year, they will complete their pilgrimage to Santiago. They are not rushing, walking their horses comfortably in the heat. Some genial ‘Holas!’, a photo, and they are on their way again, clip-clopping into the blue haze ahead.