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Pilgrimage: Journeying Beyond Self
CHRIS
DEVEREUX and ELIZABETH CARNEGIE |
This paper explores
how the experience of pilgrimage can contribute towards the
subsequent sustained transformation of individual and community
well-being. In so doing it examines four areas. The first
is to draw a conceptual map that emphasizes the linkages between
pilgrimage and wellness tourism and explores the larger meaning
of the words ‘wellness’ and ‘spirituality’.
The intention is to form a working definition and context
in which to examine the well-being aspects of pilgrimage and
the experiences it provides. The second area focuses briefly
on what spirituality and pilgrimage mean. In so doing, it
goes beyond the idea of pilgrimage as a journey to sacred
place, and concentrates more on the journeying itself, the
importance of community and the space the journey affords
for reflection on its physical, emotional and spiritual aspects.
The third area considers two case studies from the pilgrimage
experience. The first of these draws on the experiences of
those who have travelled overland to Santiago de Compostela
in Spain, while the second considers the experiences of people
who have undertaken various charity treks as a form of secular
pilgrimage. The individual experiences, drawn from those with
religious affiliations and those with none, indicate how a
challenging physical and emotional journey often - but not
always – results in not only an enhanced physical well-being,
but also a better understanding of self, a chance for renewal,
and a learning experience that can be carried forward into
daily life. The fourth area discusses how wellness tourism
might react to those seeking more meaning to their lives through
the journeying experience rather than the arrival.
Keywords: pilgrimage,
wellness, spirituality, journey, community, charity-treks,
grounded theory
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