- Time of past OR future Camino
- Past: a few. Last: Gudbrandsdalsleden. Next: TBC
Remove ads on the forum by becoming a donating member. More here. |
---|
I don't think this in any way new. I saw similar sized suitcases in a hotel and a private albergue in 2010 and 2014 on the CF. I don't recall seeing them elsewhere. Those that I saw in the hotel at Castrojeriz might not have belonged to people walking the Camino. Those in the albergue certainly did.I am on the Norte now and have reserved all lodging ahead, staying at private albergues, pensiones, and a few small hotels. I have seen luggage transport waiting for "arrivals" of owners a few times already. Their suitcases look quite big and seem to be rather high end luggage.
Here are the ones I saw today (6 of them) when checking in to the "Km101", where we had a reservation.
View attachment 146640
I will be doing my 7th Camino at the end of the month, I have never used Albergues, I am always fully booked ahead and I always have a suitcase taken forward with essential medications, clothes and the like for my medical conditions. I always consider myself a pilgrim, for example last year I walked 590 miles over 6 weeks on the Norte out to Finnisterre carrying my young brother's ashes in my back pack and placed them in the sea at Finisterre. I am always a pilgrim, always go to mass where ever I can and say the rosary as I walk along. This is the reason I walk the Caminos, I am never a tourist . I never judge anyone whether they are a tourist or pilgrim. I don't consider myself better or superior to any other person walking the Caminos. How they walk it, where the stop each night , and why they walk it is their own personal business. I would never judge anyone and would hope other people would be the same.I agree. I don't think that they needed to make a distinction between pilgrims and tourists, as I believe that whether one is a pilgrim or not depends on the intention of the individual, not how they carry their belongings. They could have just made the rule without the judgment.
Edited to add: I think that it's a good decision to not allow suitcases in these types of albergues. There are plenty of accommodations for those who are having suitcases sent ahead, and I'm happy that these albergues will be available only to those carrying their own backpack.
As a senior citizen beginning my first Camino in the Fall, I understand the need to prepare -- but lugging a suitcase is not a pilgrimage... it is touring. While I applaud the opportunity to have a company lug my backpack -- it is a compromise -- some may not be able to carry their load the whole way. However, carrying a suitcase defeats the purchase of minimalism that a pilgrim epitomizes.Several news sites today have reported on a meeting of the Camino Francés Federación in Saint Jean Pied de Port. Amongst other business the member Amigos associations have decided to ban suitcases in the 11 albergues under their direct control. A proposal which @Rebekah Scott posted here some months ago.
Las asociaciones del Camino de Santiago prohíben las maletas en los albergues que gestionan sus asociaciones, once en total
Las asociaciones del Camino de Santiago acuerdan ser "beligerantes" con los "atentados" contra la ruta jacaboeawww.noticiasdenavarra.com
Not quite the Sherpa strike at Everest base camp, but a step in the right direction I think.Several news sites today have reported on a meeting of the Camino Francés Federación in Saint Jean Pied de Port. Amongst other business the member Amigos associations have decided to ban suitcases in the 11 albergues under their direct control. A proposal which @Rebekah Scott posted here some months ago.
Las asociaciones del Camino de Santiago prohíben las maletas en los albergues que gestionan sus asociaciones, once en total
Las asociaciones del Camino de Santiago acuerdan ser "beligerantes" con los "atentados" contra la ruta jacaboeawww.noticiasdenavarra.com
He looks tired too but that hill into Astorga is quite tough at the end of the day. Lets not forget with regard to suitcases that some people are 3/4 of a world away from home and the camino is just a part of their trip
View attachment 146624
Puh-leeze, No one is saying you are less of a pilgrim if you are disabled. They are simply saying you cannot send a suitcase to their albergue. People with physical handicaps are given leeway on this rule, and they always have been. If you are physically unable to carry your own backpack, call ahead to the place you want to go and tell them what's up. It is that simple.While I understand the rationale behind this, it ignores the number of handicapped individuals, including myself, who physically can’t carry a backpack. As someone who has a cage and eight screws holding up my neck, I am blessed to be able to walk at all. Three years ago walking wasn’t a given. That my physical condition somehow makes me less of a pilgrim is disappointing to hear. I finished the French Way solo last fall.
There is in principle an exception for those with a disability. I have one too, but I can still physically carry a backpack, and so I do.While I understand the rationale behind this, it ignores the number of handicapped individuals, including myself, who physically can’t carry a backpack. As someone who has a cage and eight screws holding up my neck, I am blessed to be able to walk at all. Three years ago walking wasn’t a given. That my physical condition somehow makes me less of a pilgrim is disappointing to hear. I finished the French Way solo last fall.
Yes, a pilgrimage could be part of a longer holiday for sure - but if you want to stay in donativo albergues you have the option to send your suitcases on to Santiago, and walk with a pack.He looks tired too but that hill into Astorga is quite tough at the end of the day. Lets not forget with regard to suitcases that some people are 3/4 of a world away from home and the camino is just a part of their trip
View attachment 146624
Some do, and some don't.Which municipals accept reservation? This is news to me.
I doubt that there's any full list at the moment -- given that some individual Albergues and groups of Albergues already had such a rule last year, and that several Associations have instituted or are instituting similar.@Rebekah Scott - there's been a lot of speculation as to which albergues will institute this rule - can you clarify?
"At the beginning of September 2004, the sculpture Quo Vadis?, by the Leonese artist Sendo García Ramos, located in front of the Gaudí Palace in Astorga (León), suffered an intentional fire that left it almost reduced to ashes. The figure, which represented one of the many pilgrims who travel the Camino de Santiago, was carved in polychrome plaster, and was approximately five meters high. Later, thanks to the 6,500 euros collected through a popular collection by the Maragata society, the sculpture, with slight variations, will resurface from its remains"This statue is not a pilgrim. It is an immigrant.
Or perhaps it can contribute to helping us focus on what it is about. Not about suitcases. Not about all travellers on the Camino de Santiago. I doubt that there is a way to stop them, to prevent them from coming, to force them or convince them to adopt the same mindset about why they are travelling and walking on the Way to Santiago, given all the publicity, both current publicity from many sides and the publicity of the past 30 years.that it was predictable that mentioning of the statue would cause thread drift and not contribute much to the topic as such.
I am the first to pull up the "real pilgrims" on their obsession with what is a pilgrim, however I 100 % agree with this rule. It is not a cheap holiday option to stay in Albergues it is for those that wish to experience carrying their packs and communal living. Well done I say...Several news sites today have reported on a meeting of the Camino Francés Federación in Saint Jean Pied de Port. Amongst other business the member Amigos associations have decided to ban suitcases in the 11 albergues under their direct control. A proposal which @Rebekah Scott posted here some months ago.
Las asociaciones del Camino de Santiago prohíben las maletas en los albergues que gestionan sus asociaciones, once en total
Las asociaciones del Camino de Santiago acuerdan ser "beligerantes" con los "atentados" contra la ruta jacaboeawww.noticiasdenavarra.com
So those who send their backpacks on to the next stop don’t count as pilgrims?My google chrome translated this paragraph:
"We are traditional Jacobean shelters that work for and for the pilgrimage to Santiago. The pilgrim travels with his belongings in a backpack, the tourist with his suitcase, which makes no sense on a natural path that is done on foot, by bike or on horseback. There are other accommodations that meet the needs of a tourist and we do not want to lose the essences that make the Camino de Santiago a unique and global phenomenon", they explain from the Camino Francés Federation.
I find this interesting as there is much debate on what does and does not make a pilgrim. I guess at least the Camino Frances Federation has taken a stand on this particular statement.
Some pilgrims used donkeys or horses to carry their pack. A van driving a suitcase to a destination is just the modern version of that.As a senior citizen beginning my first Camino in the Fall, I understand the need to prepare -- but lugging a suitcase is not a pilgrimage... it is touring. While I applaud the opportunity to have a company lug my backpack -- it is a compromise -- some may not be able to carry their load the whole way. However, carrying a suitcase defeats the purchase of minimalism that a pilgrim epitomizes.
Not really. All too often a small bit of isolated knowledge of what we know about living and thinking in the Middle Ages is picked out and used to justify or to object to something in our time; it's done by all sides in the contemporary narratives. Something has its medieval roots, it is claimed, or something is just the same as in the Middle Ages while in reality the similarities are only superficial.Some pilgrims used donkeys or horses to carry their pack. A van driving a suitcase to a destination is just the modern version of that.
This point has been addressed and rebutted several times in the thread already. If, after reading the responses that address this, you still have a concern, perhaps that would be a good time to repeat the question.So those who send their backpacks on to the next stop don’t count as pilgrims?
What you are commenting on is a Spanish cultural understanding of what and who are pilgrims, which you don't get to redefine any more than anyone could redefine the notion of pilgrimage from a Catholic, religious perspective.So those who send their backpacks on to the next stop don’t count as pilgrims?
"When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, 'it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less. ' 'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make words mean so many different things. ' 'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master — that's all.”There are multiple understandings of the word, and it is pointless to get upset when someone else uses a definition that one doesn't accept oneself.
You 'll need to ask Camino Francés Federación that question. Those are their words, not the words of anyone on the forum.So those who send their backpacks on to the next stop don’t count as pilgrims?
I am using my privilege as a mod to add to a closed thread in order to clarify matters. Kathar1na has very kindly supplied the following information:
There seems to be some confusion here. From what I can gather, there are at least two statues by Sendo García Ramos in Astorga. This is the one I remember and as it is located outside the public albergue (which, from memory is the building you can see in the background), I blithely assumed it to be of a pilgrim. However, the photo in the article that Bradypus gave a link to shows a completely different statue outside a completely different building - Gaudí's Bishop's palace. Anyway, it may be time to close this tread as it is getting very cluttered, but I shall leave it for a while to give everyone a chance to have their say.
Sorry to do this, I know it annoys some members, but some more information has come to light:Will close this thread...
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?