markss
Active Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Frances from SJPP (3/10 & 10/10); Primitivo (6/12)
Along the way on my Camino and again in the Pilgrim’s Office in Santiago I heard a number of people advising pilgrims that when they present themselves in the Pilgrim’s Office upon completion of the Camino, be sure to state that the Camino was completed for spiritual or religious purposes. Otherwise they will not be issued a Compostela.
Well a couple ahead of me in the Office apparently had not gotten that message. When asked by the official they explained that their motivation was cultural, not spiritual or religious. As a consequence they were told that rather than a Compostela they would receive another certificate in acknowledgment of their completion of the Camino. At this they became irate and argued unsuccessfully for an actual Compostela.
It appears that the Compostela is very much misunderstood. Written in Latin and loosely translated it is a document that states that the person named therein has come out of a pious (ie. Religious/spiritual) motivation to the Cathedral in Santiago to revere the remains of St. James. That’s essentially its entirety.
There is no shame in not having a religious or spiritual motivation as a basis for completing the Camino. But if you do not have such, why would you want a certificate declaring that you had? Makes no sense. The alternate certificate that is issued in those instances is every bit as much of an acknowledgement of the achievement of having walked the Camino.
Whatever your motivation ... Buen Camino!
Well a couple ahead of me in the Office apparently had not gotten that message. When asked by the official they explained that their motivation was cultural, not spiritual or religious. As a consequence they were told that rather than a Compostela they would receive another certificate in acknowledgment of their completion of the Camino. At this they became irate and argued unsuccessfully for an actual Compostela.
It appears that the Compostela is very much misunderstood. Written in Latin and loosely translated it is a document that states that the person named therein has come out of a pious (ie. Religious/spiritual) motivation to the Cathedral in Santiago to revere the remains of St. James. That’s essentially its entirety.
There is no shame in not having a religious or spiritual motivation as a basis for completing the Camino. But if you do not have such, why would you want a certificate declaring that you had? Makes no sense. The alternate certificate that is issued in those instances is every bit as much of an acknowledgement of the achievement of having walked the Camino.
Whatever your motivation ... Buen Camino!