Though horrified by the degree to which wealth has been accumulated by a few, I would very much like to see any of them actually walk a Camino. Who knows; there could be a "road to Damascus" moment.
Indeed; where I live there was a very wealthy industrialist, a member of one of the local Catholic parishes, and somewhere around 2007-2010 (?) he walked from Sarria to Santiago... without having to think about his budget. What means did he use? I have no idea... but that short walk so disdained by so many produced in him a real commitment to sharing the wealth.
He donated 4 acres of good farming land on the site of an old sugar beet factory to a local Catholic Worker community outreach centre. They used the acreage to grow herbs, tender greens, vegetables, berries, and fruit trees. Until 2022 that food was used to supply their outreach kitchens, community cafe, and their CSA market boxes (that funded other non-profit outreach work).
At the height of the pandemic, the same man saw the need to do better than to have people losing homes and employment to pandemic crises living in tents throughout the region. He donated a large industrial site that he had vacant, including a banquet building that had kitchen facilities and washrooms and built "A Better Tent City".
Unfortunately the benefactor died from a sudden, aggressive cancer, and his kids ended up in legal hot water because they had run a pile of his businesses into the ground BUT, ABTC continues, and now employs a full-time, on site coordinator, provides 42 homes, has on site visits from public health nurses 3 times a week, provides addictions counselling and recovery support, etc. etc.
It's far more than many who are peevish about anything or anyone causing a disruption or inconvenience in "my camino" and yet feel superior for having put in more kilometres on a more limited budget.
It's *your camino* was never meant to be some blissed out yoga trip with hiking thrown in.... Too many people miss that point. Perhaps they should go listen a little to Fr. Manny at the Pilgrim Office chapel as he explains that "my/your camino" refers not only to the joys we each experience as unique, or the methods and means, but also the *burdens, difficulties, and obligations* that make up the larger path that is our road through the rest of life.
A selfish and self-absorbed person can be so on a limited budget as easily as a wealthy person can consciously deliver what s/he does not need to those who do.