Friday, February 11, 2011

Egypt: Victory Day


Wanted to post that on this day, Feb. 11, 2011, the Egyptian people celebrated a milestone in the country's life as it lurched toward a more democratic nation. The politics and cultural issues are thick and knotty. Nonetheless, with President Mubarak becoming the "former President" of Egypt, the people, who gathered in Tahrir Square (literally meaning Liberation Square) brought forth what terrorists and anarchists could not do: true(r) liberation.

To the people I've met in Egypt on many pilgrimages, congrats!

B

Thursday, February 10, 2011

An Argument for Pilgrimage ( by Dennis Praeger)

This is sheer eloquence!

Saw it on anderwsullivan.com, by Dennis Praeger: a reason to be on pilgrimage (my paraphrase):

Enjoy!

B

It is major because all this travel has been life-changing and life-enhancing. For many years, I have urged young people to take a year off after high school to work and to take time off while in college to travel abroad, ideally alone for at least some of the time.

Nearly everyone grows up insular. The problem is that vast numbers of people never leave the cloistered world of their childhood. This is as true for those who grow up in Manhattan as it is for those who grow up in Fargo. And as for college, there are few places as insular and cloistered as the university.

Insularity is bad because at the very least it prevents questioning oneself and thinking through important ideas and convictions. And at worst, it facilitates the groupthink that enables most great evils. Although one can hold onto insular and bad ideas even after interacting with others, it is much harder to do so, especially when one interacts on the others’ terms, as must be done when traveling to other cultures (and especially when traveling alone).

It is therefore one of the most maturing things a person can do. It is also one of the most humbling. I will never forget the effect of hosting a weekly radio show in which I was the moderator among clergy of every religion. After five years, I announced this conclusion: “The moment you meet people of other faiths whom you consider to be at least as decent, as least as religious, and at least as intelligent as you think you are, you will never be the same.”

This is not to suggest that the inevitable consequence of international travel is multicultural relativism — the belief that every culture is equal, that no culture is morally or culturally superior. On the contrary, my going abroad every year for 42 years has strengthened my appreciation of both Western culture and America’s unique value system (what I call the American Trinity: liberty, in God we trust, e pluribus unum).

But there is one benefit to international travel that probably cannot be gained in any other way: Other nations and other peoples become real.

Pace!

Buen Camino!

B

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Rilke and Pilgrimage

Rilke wrote on pilgrimage, there is only one journey: going inside yourself.

Pace!

B

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Desert Pilgrimage 2011


I had a great session of welcoming people to the Desert Pilgrimage, 2011, at United Church of Chapel Hill (NC) this morning, and wanted to share it broadly:

DESERT PILGRIMAGE 2011!

Purpose:
This pilgrimage explores the wandering nature of the Pilgrim God. We will begin with our sojourn in Jerusalem, visiting the Holy Sites, then to the town of Bethlehem to work with Palestinian Christians. We will then strike out to the desert of the Sinai for 5 days and 4 nights on pilgrimage with Bedouins, followed by a day and night at St. Catherine's Monastery o, and a night at a resort on the Red Sea.

Dates: Nov. 10-22, 2011

Cost: Around $2,500 (depending upon everyone coming, meaning at least 15 people).

Write me at Brett@schoolofthepilgrim.com
919-444-9111

Pace!

Brett