Serving Pilgrims in Astorga
An hospitalera recounts her experience of serving at Albergue de Peregrinos Siervas de María in Astorga, Spain, in August 2024.
An hospitalera recounts her experience of serving at Albergue de Peregrinos Siervas de María in Astorga, Spain, in August 2024.
Jerald Stroebele highlights some handy guidebooks for the Camino Francés, plus some helpful resources and guides for routes less traveled.
In this poem, Suzanne Doerge describes a radiance that enshrouds one who has made pilgrimage, to carry home as their own sacred truth.
On the Camino Portugués, a pilgrim experiences a sense of sonder, the realization that each random passerby is living a life as vivid and complex as her own. Everyone on the Camino is on their own journey, experiencing elation, contemplation, fatigue, suffering, and hope. And while our journeys are each our own, the Camino experience allows us to more wholly relate to the humanness of our fellow pilgrims. A lesson we’d all do well to carry with us in daily life.
As he packs for a move, a pilgrim discovers a yellowed sheet of paper listing names from his Camino. These were people he met and prayed for—a daily Camino practice that indebly recorded them in his memories. A quarter century on, he still carries them in his heart.
As a woman prepares for her Camino, a nagging fear persists that she won’t be able to finish the walk. Inspired by Tina Fey and empowered by a cheering squad of friends and family and a backpack adorned with the fun, encouraging, and weird patches they sent her, she carries on. And in so doing, she discovers in herself the belief that she can finish.
Mary Baldree offers her ode to the pilgrim shell. It’s more than just a scallop shell hanging on a backpack. It’s so much more.
A pilgrim packs a lot on her Camino: hopes without expectation, an open mind and heart, burdens to lay down. Along the way, she is filled with an appreciation for beauty found in challenges, inspiration from others, and a profound knowledge of the gifts the Camino shares.
On the Camino and in daily life, an agate, a bloodstone, and a small pressed glass Camino shell carried in his pocket help remind a man to stay grounded, to be present, to be grateful, and to go forward as a pilgrim.
Through a boundless interchange of help that a husband and wife experience on their pilgrimage, they come to know Camino magic.