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Before yesterday I didn't know that . . .

Jeff Crawley

Veteran Member
Time of past OR future Camino
A "Tourigrino" trip once Covid has passed, so 2023
Among the many, many things I was ignorant of is the Jubilee Camino.

Coming home from London yesterday, while scanning the departure boards at the station, I had a chance meeting with a fellow pilgrim - Father Eoin (I think that's spelled correctly) is a softly spoken Irishman and he had spotted a couple of Camino patches on my daypack (which I had been in two minds about sewing on).

We compared notes on our pilgrimages: my first was a conventional SJPP to Santiago in 2001 whilst he'd walked the CF in 1999 from Pamplona just before entering a seminary in Ireland for training. Apparently 1999 was a "Jubilee" year in addition to being a Holy Year (25th July and all that) and to qualify you needed to enter Santiago cathedral through the Holy Door, say a prayer, make confession and receive communion.

I asked if he'd walked the last 100km and received his Compostela and was told he had, indeed, walked the whole way staying with members of the priesthood or being lodged in village houses along the way. It seems that to celebrate a Jubilee there's no need to walk at all, you just arrive in Santiago by any means at your disposal and he hadn't sought out a Compostela although he did "buy a postcard" as a memento.

In addition to Santiago you can also celebrate the Jubilee in Villafranca del Bierzo and one other Spanish town though I didn't catch the name.

He's hoping to obtain a leave of absence from his bishop to repeat the journey in the next jubilee year which it seems is 2027?

My train was announced and so we parted but it was a lovely chance meeting and I was glad that I had, after all, sewn the patches on my bag.

I made some notes on the train but some of the details above may be wrong, as I said he, was quietly spoken!

Has anybody else had a chance meeting another Pilgrim while not on the Camino?
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Among the many, many things I was ignorant of is the Jubilee Camino.

Coming home from London yesterday, while scanning the departure boards at the station, I had a chance meeting with a fellow pilgrim - Father Eoin (I think that's spelled correctly) is a softly spoken Irishman and he had spotted a couple of Camino patches on my daypack (which I had been in two minds about sewing on).

We compared notes on our pilgrimages: my first was a conventional SJPP to Santiago in 2001 whilst he'd walked the CF in 1999 from Pamplona just before entering a seminary in Ireland for training. Apparently 1999 was a "Jubilee" year in addition to being a Holy Year (25th July and all that) and to qualify you needed to enter Santiago cathedral through the Holy Door, say a prayer, make confession and receive communion.

I asked if he'd walked the last 100km and received his Compostela and was told he had, indeed, walked the whole way staying with members of the priesthood or being lodged in village houses along the way. It seems that to celebrate a Jubilee there's no need to walk at all, you just arrive in Santiago by any means at your disposal and he hadn't sought out a Compostela although he did "buy a postcard" as a memento.

In addition to Santiago you can also celebrate the Jubilee in Villafranca del Bierzo and one other Spanish town though I didn't catch the name.

He's hoping to obtain a leave of absence from his bishop to repeat the journey in the next jubilee year which it seems is 2027?

My train was announced and so we parted but it was a lovely chance meeting and I was glad that I had, after all, sewn the patches on my bag.

I made some notes on the train but some of the details above may be wrong, as I said he, was quietly spoken!

Has anybody else had a chance meeting another Pilgrim while not on the Camino?
Often! I have a patch on my backpack and meet people in airports all the time. We also have a shell sticker on our pickup topper and have met people in the grocery store parking lot as well on the road to other places such as in Canada and Alaska last summer. It kind of doubles as a secret handshake or special code word.20241219_090744.webp
 
Apparently 1999 was a "Jubilee" year in addition to being a Holy Year (25th July and all that) and to qualify you needed to enter Santiago cathedral through the Holy Door, say a prayer, make confession and receive communion.

He's hoping to obtain a leave of absence from his bishop to repeat the journey in the next jubilee year which it seems is 2027?
According to this article from Correos the terms Holy Year and Jubilee Year are interchangeable, and the next one will be 2027.

 
Train for your next Camino on California's Santa Catalina Island March 30 to April 2
I have a shell tattoo on my calf. I have been stopped by three women who also have walked Camino and stopped by 3 or 4 people who want to walk Camino and had questions. I am more than happy to blather on endlessly when asked.
 
is 2025 the jubilee year in Rome which is different from St James day falling on a Sunday
 
... Apparently 1999 was a "Jubilee" year in addition to being a Holy Year (25th July and all that) and to qualify you needed to enter Santiago cathedral through the Holy Door, say a prayer, make confession and receive communion.

In addition to Santiago you can also celebrate the Jubilee in Villafranca del Bierzo and one other Spanish town though I didn't catch the name.

... the next jubilee year which it seems is 2027?

Holy Year and Jubilee Year are two different names for essentially the same thing. The term 'jubilee' comes from the Old Testament/the Jewish faith, Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jubilee_in_the_Catholic_Church has a really good article about that. A plenary indulgence is then, depending on some requirements, is then granted to pilgrims.

The next Holy Year/Jubilee for the Catholic Church in general will be in 2025 and the next Holy Year Jubilee for Santiago de Compostela will be in 2027.
I remember vividly the confusion the an Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy for 2015–2016 caused, especially as Holy Doors allover the Catholic world, including Santiago, were open and many pilgrims confused it with a Holy Year for Santiago.
The plenary indulgence, which is in the heart of a Holy Year/Jubilee, is granted to those pilgrims that ask for it because they can't continue there pilgrimage for severe health reasons. And yes, there is a Holy Door also in Villafranca del Bierzo.
BUT to gain the Jubilee you do NOT need to enter the cathedral or chuch through the Holy Door.
BC SY
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
I think it’s excellent that people with a shared interest in all things ‘Camino’ can recognise each other.

I do wonder, however, what the good Lord makes of the layers of complexity which ‘we’ have created to mystify and categorise degrees of faith or worthiness. Each to their own, I suppose.
 
is 2025 the jubilee year in Rome which is different from St James day falling on a Sunday
Short answer; yes. There are old threads on the topic.

Long answer: The 2025 Jubilee year (Pilgrims of Hope) is being specifically celebrated by Holy Doors being opened and indulgences being granted in Rome, Jerusalem, and at select basilicas in certain countries. Santiago de Compostela isn't one of those.

The Cathedral in Santiago next intends to open their door in 2027.
 
I think it’s excellent that people with a shared interest in all things ‘Camino’ can recognise each other.

I do wonder, however, what the good Lord makes of the layers of complexity which ‘we’ have created to mystify and categorise degrees of faith or worthiness. Each to their own, I suppose.
I'm betting on the words in Revelation to the church at Laodecia ( spelling wrong).

For me, if the Cathedral wanted to reduce traffic, they'd reintroduce the quizzing the early pilgrims (I think Bradypus has written on this) experienced, or simply deny Compostela to anyone not walking for admitted spiritual reasons. But, again, that is not the point of pilgrimage, and I would suggest that they know it.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
For me, if the Cathedral wanted to reduce traffic, they'd reintroduce the quizzing the early pilgrims (I think Bradypus has written on this)
A very different time. I was grilled at both ends of the Camino. In SJPDP I was refused a credencial partly because I arrived without a letter of introduction from a Catholic priest and was not a member of a recognised confraternity. The priests in Roncesvalles were far less particular! :cool: Then a long in-depth religious discussion with a priest in the cathedral in Santiago on what pilgrimage, relics and the Apostle meant to this Protestant theology student before receiving my Compostela. Giving some account of your motivation and pilgrimage experience was routine at the time - my CSJ guide warned me to expect to be questioned - but my own inquisition was deeper than most as Protestant clergy and ordinands were still a fairly rare breed on the Camino at the time. Not in any sense a hostile or adversarial conversation. Genuine interest and curiosity on the priest's part. I found it a very helpful and generous debriefing exercise for reflecting on my experience.
 
Has anybody else had a chance meeting another Pilgrim while not on the Camino?
I'm remembering two. Both along the Appalachian Trail and both trying to thru hike the whole thing . The first was in 2016, he was a Mexican with the trail name Monte Christo and was maybe 100 km along in Georgia when we were doing a five day out and back. He had walked the CF and got a six month visa to do the AT.

The second was a couple of years ago in a Shenandoah National Park campground that the AT ran through. We were camped for the night with our trailer on our way south. He had walked about a third of the way but since he started very early it was still cold. Very cold that evening in fact and he had a half hour to go hoping to pitch his tent in a shelter to double protect him. I invited him in for a drink of wine and we then detained him the rest of the evening with heat, wine, hot food and conversation. That's when we found out he and a girlfriend walked the Portuguese. We had no room for him to sleep inside but he pitched his tent just outside and we gave him a blanket to supplement his bag and he was warm enough. His brother had given him the trail name Backstroke after he fell backward with his pack while wading a river on a hike.
 
Last year in the United lounge at SFO I met a man with a shell on his backpack who had just completed his Camino while I was heading off to start mine. I have also met people while walking or hiking locally who are fellow pilgrims.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Among the many, many things I was ignorant of is the Jubilee Camino.

Coming home from London yesterday, while scanning the departure boards at the station, I had a chance meeting with a fellow pilgrim - Father Eoin (I think that's spelled correctly) is a softly spoken Irishman and he had spotted a couple of Camino patches on my daypack (which I had been in two minds about sewing on).

We compared notes on our pilgrimages: my first was a conventional SJPP to Santiago in 2001 whilst he'd walked the CF in 1999 from Pamplona just before entering a seminary in Ireland for training. Apparently 1999 was a "Jubilee" year in addition to being a Holy Year (25th July and all that) and to qualify you needed to enter Santiago cathedral through the Holy Door, say a prayer, make confession and receive communion.

I asked if he'd walked the last 100km and received his Compostela and was told he had, indeed, walked the whole way staying with members of the priesthood or being lodged in village houses along the way. It seems that to celebrate a Jubilee there's no need to walk at all, you just arrive in Santiago by any means at your disposal and he hadn't sought out a Compostela although he did "buy a postcard" as a memento.

In addition to Santiago you can also celebrate the Jubilee in Villafranca del Bierzo and one other Spanish town though I didn't catch the name.

He's hoping to obtain a leave of absence from his bishop to repeat the journey in the next jubilee year which it seems is 2027?

My train was announced and so we parted but it was a lovely chance meeting and I was glad that I had, after all, sewn the patches on my bag.

I made some notes on the train but some of the details above may be wrong, as I said he, was quietly spoken!

Has anybody else had a chance meeting another Pilgrim while not on the Camino?
In the early Middle Ages the 30 December was St James’ Feast day, based on the old Hispanic (Mozarabic) rite.
In the 11th century King Alfonso VI abolished the Hispanic rite in favour of the Roman rite and 25 July became the principal feast day to commemorate the martyrdom of St. James.
December 30 was incorporated into the present liturgical calendar as the Feast of the Translation of his relics. And, just to confuse matters more, although we celebrate his Feast Day on 25th July using the Roman Rite calendar, it was formerly on the 5th August on the Tridentine Rite calendar.

Watch a video of the 1915 Holy Year here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsnB1mLZwlQ
Among the many, many things I was ignorant of is the Jubilee Camino.

Coming home from London yesterday, while scanning the departure boards at the station, I had a chance meeting with a fellow pilgrim - Father Eoin (I think that's spelled correctly) is a softly spoken Irishman and he had spotted a couple of Camino patches on my daypack (which I had been in two minds about sewing on).

We compared notes on our pilgrimages: my first was a conventional SJPP to Santiago in 2001 whilst he'd walked the CF in 1999 from Pamplona just before entering a seminary in Ireland for training. Apparently 1999 was a "Jubilee" year in addition to being a Holy Year (25th July and all that) and to qualify you needed to enter Santiago cathedral through the Holy Door, say a prayer, make confession and receive communion.

I asked if he'd walked the last 100km and received his Compostela and was told he had, indeed, walked the whole way staying with members of the priesthood or being lodged in village houses along the way. It seems that to celebrate a Jubilee there's no need to walk at all, you just arrive in Santiago by any means at your disposal and he hadn't sought out a Compostela although he did "buy a postcard" as a memento.

In addition to Santiago you can also celebrate the Jubilee in Villafranca del Bierzo and one other Spanish town though I didn't catch the name.

He's hoping to obtain a leave of absence from his bishop to repeat the journey in the next jubilee year which it seems is 2027?

My train was announced and so we parted but it was a lovely chance meeting and I was glad that I had, after all, sewn the patches on my bag.

I made some notes on the train but some of the details above may be wrong, as I said he, was quietly spoken!

Has anybody else had a chance meeting another Pilgrim while not on the Camino?
In the early Middle Ages the 30 December was St James’ Feast day, based on the old Hispanic (Mozarabic) rite.
In the 11th century King Alfonso VI abolished the Hispanic rite in favour of the Roman rite and 25 July became the principal feast day to commemorate the martyrdom of St. James.
December 30 was incorporated into the present liturgical calendar as the Feast of the Translation of his relics. And, just to confuse matters more, although we celebrate his Feast Day on 25th July using the Roman Rite calendar, it was formerly on the 5th August on the Tridentine Rite calendar.

Watch a video of the 1915 Holy Year here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsnB1mLZwlQ
Among the many, many things I was ignorant of is the Jubilee Camino.

Coming home from London yesterday, while scanning the departure boards at the station, I had a chance meeting with a fellow pilgrim - Father Eoin (I think that's spelled correctly) is a softly spoken Irishman and he had spotted a couple of Camino patches on my daypack (which I had been in two minds about sewing on).

We compared notes on our pilgrimages: my first was a conventional SJPP to Santiago in 2001 whilst he'd walked the CF in 1999 from Pamplona just before entering a seminary in Ireland for training. Apparently 1999 was a "Jubilee" year in addition to being a Holy Year (25th July and all that) and to qualify you needed to enter Santiago cathedral through the Holy Door, say a prayer, make confession and receive communion.

I asked if he'd walked the last 100km and received his Compostela and was told he had, indeed, walked the whole way staying with members of the priesthood or being lodged in village houses along the way. It seems that to celebrate a Jubilee there's no need to walk at all, you just arrive in Santiago by any means at your disposal and he hadn't sought out a Compostela although he did "buy a postcard" as a memento.

In addition to Santiago you can also celebrate the Jubilee in Villafranca del Bierzo and one other Spanish town though I didn't catch the name.

He's hoping to obtain a leave of absence from his bishop to repeat the journey in the next jubilee year which it seems is 2027?

My train was announced and so we parted but it was a lovely chance meeting and I was glad that I had, after all, sewn the patches on my bag.

I made some notes on the train but some of the details above may be wrong, as I said he, was quietly spoken!

Has anybody else had a chance meeting another Pilgrim while not on the Camino?
In the early Middle Ages the 30 December was St James’ Feast day, based on the old Hispanic (Mozarabic) rite.
In the 11th century King Alfonso VI abolished the Hispanic rite in favour of the Roman rite and 25 July became the principal feast day to commemorate the martyrdom of St. James.
December 30 was incorporated into the present liturgical calendar as the Feast of the Translation of his relics. And, just to confuse matters more, although we celebrate his Feast Day on 25th July using the Roman Rite calendar, it was formerly on the 5th August on the Tridentine Rite calendar.

Watch a video of the 1915 Holy Year here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsnB1mLZwlQ
 
In the early Middle Ages the 30 December was St James’ Feast day, based on the old Hispanic (Mozarabic) rite.
In the 11th century King Alfonso VI abolished the Hispanic rite in favour of the Roman rite and 25 July became the principal feast day to commemorate the martyrdom of St. James.
December 30 was incorporated into the present liturgical calendar as the Feast of the Translation of his relics. And, just to confuse matters more, although we celebrate his Feast Day on 25th July using the Roman Rite calendar, it was formerly on the 5th August on the Tridentine Rite calendar.

Watch a video of the 1915 Holy Year here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsnB1mLZwlQ

In the early Middle Ages the 30 December was St James’ Feast day, based on the old Hispanic (Mozarabic) rite.
In the 11th century King Alfonso VI abolished the Hispanic rite in favour of the Roman rite and 25 July became the principal feast day to commemorate the martyrdom of St. James.
December 30 was incorporated into the present liturgical calendar as the Feast of the Translation of his relics. And, just to confuse matters more, although we celebrate his Feast Day on 25th July using the Roman Rite calendar, it was formerly on the 5th August on the Tridentine Rite calendar.

Watch a video of the 1915 Holy Year here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsnB1mLZwlQ

In the early Middle Ages the 30 December was St James’ Feast day, based on the old Hispanic (Mozarabic) rite.
In the 11th century King Alfonso VI abolished the Hispanic rite in favour of the Roman rite and 25 July became the principal feast day to commemorate the martyrdom of St. James.
December 30 was incorporated into the present liturgical calendar as the Feast of the Translation of his relics. And, just to confuse matters more, although we celebrate his Feast Day on 25th July using the Roman Rite calendar, it was formerly on the 5th August on the Tridentine Rite calendar.

Watch a video of the 1915 Holy Year here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsnB1mLZwlQ
That left me so confused at first :)
 
Yes, in Bridgetown, a very small country town in Western Australia. I was sitting outside at a cafe and spotted a fellow customer wearing a Camino shell pendant around his neck. Needless to say we talked for ages about our Camino experiences.
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
Earlier this year, in April 2024, my granddaughter and I completed the Camino Portuguese. Afterwards, we traveled to London for some tourism. On this one day we were taking the tube when an elderly gentleman and his wife entered the crowded car. He was walking with hiking poles. I stood and gave him my seat and we started a conversation. I mentioned that we had just come from a trip where we had seen many people using walking sticks. With a twinkle in his eye he asked where that was, and I think he knew what I was going to answer. It turned out he was in his eighties and had completed the Camino Frances several years earlier, and had also more recently completed the Kumano Kodo in Japan! He showed us photos from his Japanese adventure and the four of us enjoyed an entertaining ride on the tube. Hats off to "Perfectly Imperfect James" .. which is how he referred to himself. I hope I am still able to walk a Camino when I am his age.
 

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