Walking Meditation: Being Present and Being Pilgrim on the Camino de Santiago

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2018, Vol 9, Issue 3

Abstract

The Camino de Santiago has witnessed an unprecedented number of walkers in recent years. Traditionalists feel that the Camino is suffering from excess—too many visitors and too much strain on the infrastructure, accompanied by an ignorance of what it means to be an “authentic” pilgrim. Contemporary pilgrims often use ancillary services to transport their bags, approaching the Camino as an athletic event or a holiday excursion. For scholars and people of faith, these superficial attitudes to the ancient pilgrimage route are disturbing. How can serious pilgrims make peace with those who have neither the historical nor the religious background to understand the magnitude of their endeavor? Vietnamese Zen master and peace activist Thich Nhat Hahn offers us the practice of walking meditation as a means of being present. I believe that pilgrims can benefit from studying the principles of walking meditation as it is observed in the Buddhist tradition. Pilgrims of all faiths and backgrounds can make use of Thich Nhat Hahn’s practice to enhance their experience. Travelers who incorporate the custom of walking meditation may find common ground. Certainly, those who choose to do walking meditation while on pilgrimage will be more mindful of their journey.

Authors and Affiliations

Alison T. Smith

Keywords

Related Articles

Minority Political Representation: Muslim Councilors in Newham and Hackney

Scholars have long been intrigued by the role of minority elected officials in representing the interests of their communities. There is an on-going debate on whether distinctive minority agendas exist and whether the...

Fast, Feast and Feminism: Teaching Food and Gender in Italian Religious Women’s Writings

In the wake of Caroline Walker Bynum’s essential studies on the crucial role food played in the lives of medieval religious women, significant attention has been given to the connection between premodern women’s spirit...

From Dis-Enclosure to Decolonisation: In Dialogue with Nancy and Mbembe on Self-Determination and the Other

What might a sense of decolonisation (not)/be? Or, what comes after the logic of the coloniser? This question is at the centre of many debates in South Africa and extends to all countries worldwide who are faced with t...

Islam and Political Violence

The global threat of Al Qaeda post 9/11 and ISIL, increased Sunni-Shia conflicts, and violence in the Middle East and Pakistan dominate headlines and challenge governments in the region and globally. Both Muslim extrem...

Christian Conversion, the Double Consciousness, and Transcendentalist Religious Rhetoric

Despite the theological gulf that separated the Transcendentalists from their Puritan predecessors, certain leading Transcendentalists—Emerson, Fuller, and Thoreau among them—often punctuated their writings, published...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25950
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9030082
  • Views 334
  • Downloads 9

How To Cite

Alison T. Smith (2018). Walking Meditation: Being Present and Being Pilgrim on the Camino de Santiago. Religions, 9(3), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25950