Stand at the crossroads and look;
and ask for ancient paths
where the good way lies;
and walk in it,
and find rest for your souls.
Camino reflections: Portuguese hospitality
The taxi driver assured us he knew the way to Mosteiró and the start of our Camino.
Leaving the airport, we passed through the inevitable industrial estates on the outskirts of Porto, then on through increasingly rural spaces: small fields of maize dotted between the warehouses and factories, until finally we were bumping over cobbled streets through elderly Portuguese villages.
Eventually he abandoned us on a quiet street corner and pointed to a run-down café on the other side of the road, confidently telling us that this was Mosteiró. There was no sign of the Camino; no friendly yellow arrows pointing us towards Santiago de Compostela. Just a silent Portuguese street, miles from anywhere.
In the café a few elderly men were passing the time of day over tiny cups of sweet, black coffee. We asked if this was Mosteiró, where the start of the Camino was, and whether we could get a sandwich or a bowl of soup to start us on our way.
After eyeing us up and down, one of the men volunteered that this was not Mosteiró, that we would find the Camino a few kilometres back down the road on which we had just come, and that the café sold coffee only, and no food.
Then, recognising our disheartened faces, he broke into a smile, bundled us into tiny car, our backpacks and walking poles crammed into the boot, and drove us back to Mosteiró and the start of our Camino. He dropped us by a warm and friendly café where hordes of farm labourers were tucking into bowls of soup, washed down by carafes of vinho tinto, and pointed out the bright yellow arrows that would set us, refreshed and energised, on our way.
That simple, generous hospitality to strangers was a feature of our Camino: from the owners of the Albergues and Casas who welcomed us into their homes; the elderly couple who plied us with green figs they had just been picking from their tree; the two old men who daily came down to a river to feed the ducks; the friendly gestures of people we met on the way; and the cheerful waves and ‘Bon Camino’s that greeted us as we tramped our way.
Portugal is not a wealthy country, and much of the area we walked through seemed caught in a previous century.
Perhaps, though, the very presence of pilgrims, walking those paths over so many centuries, has endowed the culture with a sense of hospitality: to welcome the pilgrim and the stranger.
Pilgrim: Walking the Camino Portugués
Eight days, 103 kilometres. Four pilgrims.
A pause in the busyness and emotions of life.
To walk the Portuguese Camino from Porto to Valença has been a wonderful experience. Returning home to ordinary life and a busy few months ahead, it has been good to reflect on what was it that made it so special. Was this truly a pilgrimage (we never intended to go all the way to Santiago de Compostela), or just a gentle walk in the Portuguese countryside? If it was a pilgrimage, what was its significance?
Pilgrimage: The journeying of a pilgrim: a journey to a shrine or other holy place
Chambers Dictionary
Perhaps I am a pilgrim, and remain a pilgrim, marked not just by the shell on my backpack, but in my everyday life as well.
Pilgrim: A wanderer, wayfarer: one who travels to a distance to visit a holy place: allegorically or spiritually, one journeying through life as a stranger in this world
Chambers Dictionary
The Camino, for me, was significant, not so much in the destination, but in the journeying itself, and the incompleteness of it. And while there was a physical aspect to it – located in a particular time and place, walking part way along the Camino towards Santiago de Compostela – it also represented a pause in that bigger pilgrimage of life. The very act of walking created stillness and presence. So I was able to lay aside the emotions and the busyness of life, neither to linger in the past nor to rush forward to the future, but simply to be present, in the present, walking – with Lois, with my parents, with our God. To appreciate beauty, stillness, silence, simplicity.
‘Petrus, on the other hand, argued that the guiding concept along the Road to Santiago was its simplicity. That the Road was one along which any person could walk, that its significance could be understood by even the least sophisticated person, and that, in fact, only such a road as that could lead to God.’
Paulo Coelho, The Pilgrimage, p52