The Camino
The Camino: A Journey Towards the Holy Land
The Camino de Santiago, a pilgrimage path across Spain, offers a profound experience of personal transformation and collective unity. It brings together people from all walks of life, each on their unique hero’s journey, yet bound by the shared steps of the Camino. Each “Buen Camino” uttered along the way is not just a greeting—it’s an affirmation of solidarity. We walk alone, and yet we walk together. This shared journey, this collective spirit, stirs something deeply spiritual in every pilgrim. The realization arises that we are the Camino. The path is not only an external road; it is forged by each pilgrim’s heart, step by step.
The profound connection experienced on the Camino de Santiago has inspired in me a vision: a Camino de Jerusalem, a pilgrimage to the Holy Land that embodies the same spiritual depth, but with a higher purpose. This pilgrimage would not merely lead to the sacred city, but rather invite pilgrims to walk a path of healing—healing for themselves, for their ancestors, and for the world.
A Path to Healing and Peace
Today, humanity is wounded. The traumas we bear are not only our own but inherited across generations. The scars of wars, violence, oppression, and division stretch deep, and these unresolved wounds influence our present and shape our future. The Camino de Jerusalem offers an opportunity to heal—individually and collectively. As we walk this path, we will process and release the intergenerational traumas we carry, step by step.
This new Camino would serve as a metaphor for global healing. It would bring people together from different cultures, faiths, and nations, united in the shared experience of pilgrimage. Walking the Camino is an act of humility and surrender. Every step taken together, every shared greeting of “Shalom Camino,” would dissolve the barriers that separate us. The journey becomes a shared ritual of reconciliation, an opportunity for collective growth and unity in a world so often divided by fear and suffering.
As the world suffers from ongoing conflicts, environmental crises, and the aftershocks of a global pandemic, there is no better time to establish a pilgrimage that offers a path toward peace. By walking this Camino, we take a stand for peace, for connection, and for understanding. We acknowledge the pain of the past, but we also embrace the possibility of a brighter, more harmonious future. The Camino de Jerusalem would be a powerful symbol of our collective desire to heal—not only for ourselves but for future generations.
Uniting in a Shared Experience
The beauty of the Camino de Jerusalem lies in the way it mirrors life: a personal journey intertwined with the collective. It would call upon pilgrims from all corners of the globe, inviting them to shed their differences and walk together in a shared experience. The healing power of such a pilgrimage is immense. The simple act of walking—sharing meals, prayers, and stories along the way—can bridge divides that seemed insurmountable.
This journey would remind us that at our core, we are all connected. Our stories, no matter how different, share common threads of love, loss, hope, and resilience. As pilgrims, we are not defined by our past or our pain but by the courage to step forward, to forgive, to seek understanding, and to heal.
Imagine pilgrims of all ages, backgrounds, and faiths, walking toward the Holy Land—children of different traditions holding hands, elders sharing wisdom, youth carrying the hopes of tomorrow. As they walk, they carry with them the stories of their ancestors, the weight of intergenerational trauma, and the responsibility to heal not just for themselves, but for all who came before and all who will come after.
The Camino as a Legacy for Generations
Just as the Camino de Santiago has inspired millions over centuries, the Camino de Jerusalem would create a new legacy of peace. This pilgrimage would become a beacon for future generations, calling upon them to walk the peace Camino as a rite of passage, a journey of reflection, transformation, and hope.
Drawing inspiration from pilgrims like Saint Teresa of Avila, we could integrate elements of spiritual reflection and inner transformation into the pilgrimage. Saint Teresa wrote: “The important thing is not to think much, but to love much; and so, do that which best stirs you to love.” The Camino de Jerusalem could embody this philosophy—a pilgrimage where every step is taken in love, in peace, and with the intention to heal.
Other figures, like Thomas Merton, who explored the spiritual journey as a path to self-realization and divine union, could further inspire this pilgrimage. Merton’s reflections on silence, contemplation, and the inner journey resonate with the essence of a Camino—a path walked not just in the physical sense, but as a pilgrimage of the soul. His words, “We are already one, but we imagine that we are not. What we have to recover is our original unity,” could serve as a guiding light for pilgrims on the Camino de Jerusalem, helping them realize that the path to peace is the path to rediscovering our oneness.
A Camino of Unity for a Divided World
The Camino de Jerusalem would be a pilgrimage of unity—a call to transcend borders and differences, to heal the divisions that have torn humanity apart for centuries. It would serve as a reminder that while we may walk different paths in life, our destination is shared. We seek peace, healing, and a sense of belonging.
The Holy Land, with its layers of history, conflict, and sacredness, is the perfect place for such a pilgrimage. Jerusalem, a city sacred to Jews, Christians, and Muslims, offers a symbolic and physical meeting point for dialogue, understanding, and peace. The Camino de Jerusalem would invite people of all faiths and none to walk together, not as strangers, but as fellow pilgrims on a shared journey.
By walking this Camino, we set an example for future generations. We show them that peace is not an abstract ideal, but a practice—something that is built step by step, together. This Camino would inspire a new generation of peace walkers, people committed to living in harmony with themselves, each other, and the world around them.
The Peace Camino
Ultimately, the Camino de Jerusalem would be a Camino of Peace. As pilgrims walk the path toward the Holy Land, they would symbolically walk toward a new era—one where we prioritize healing over division, love over fear, and unity over separation. It would be a pilgrimage that brings peace not only to those who walk it but to the world.
The legacy of this Camino would not end with the physical journey. It would ripple outward, inspiring communities to build bridges of understanding, to nurture peace within their hearts and within their relationships. Future generations would walk this path, not just as a journey toward the Holy Land, but as a journey toward peace—a journey that the world desperately needs.
Together, as we walk, we would come to realize that we are the Camino, and as we heal ourselves, we heal the world. Shalom Camino.