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Perhaps you should email the Pilgrim Office with this question. Their email is oficinadelperegrino@catedraldesantiago.es. If you get a response it would be interesting to know the answer.On a commercial website with camino souvenirs I came across this credencial.
I quite like the design but wonder if it is actually recognized by the Pilgrims' Office in Santiago?
Is it issued by any of the official Pilgrim Associations?
Maybe those who have served there could comment please?
View attachment 142946
From reading the blurb alongside the item, I can imagine some people purchasing this, believing it would be accepted at the pilgrims office! Surely it should be listed as “ For display/souvenir use only!”On a commercial website with camino souvenirs I came across this credencial.
I quite like the design but wonder if it is actually recognized by the Pilgrims' Office in Santiago?
Is it issued by any of the official Pilgrim Associations?
Maybe those who have served there could comment please?
View attachment 142946
Good idea! I just emailed them with my question and will let you know as soon as they respond.Perhaps you should email the Pilgrim Office with this question. Their email is oficinadelperegrino@catedraldesantiago.es. If you get a response it would be interesting to know the answer.
Because some years ago the cathedral made a decision that the pilgrim office would only accept credencials which were issued by the cathedral or by approved groups such as the various national pilgrim associations. Many commercial outfits were making and selling their own versions at the time. Someone who uses an unofficial credencial may be refused entry to some albergues and may not be given a Compostela at the end of the journey.Why would it not, it documents your travel,
The pilgrim office has requirements about what credencials it will accept. See https://oficinadelperegrino.com/en/pilgrimage/the-credencial/.Why would it not, it documents your travel,
Thanks for the link, it makes it clear ,The pilgrim office has requirements about what credencials it will accept. See https://oficinadelperegrino.com/en/pilgrimage/the-credencial/.
Seems a silly rule to me. Might be easy to forge a credential, but all the colored stamps and dates in different handwriting? I got all my sellos in my diary, but then I wasn't interested in the certificate.Because some years ago the cathedral made a decision that the pilgrim office would only accept credencials which were issued by the cathedral or by approved groups such as the various national pilgrim associations. Many commercial outfits were making and selling their own versions at the time. Someone who uses an unofficial credencial may be refused entry to some albergues and may not be given a Compostela at the end of the journey.
I agree. I am simply stating what the pilgrim office policy currently is - I am not endorsing it. One of a number of pedantic rules in recent years. I carry an officially recognised credencial on my Camino journeys to avoid any problems with access to albergues but I no longer ask for a Compostela on arrival in Santiago. So I do not pay much attention to the number and dates of the sellos I receive along the way.Seems a silly rule to me.
Did you get a reply from the Pilgrim Office in Santiago?Thanks everyone for your replies. I thought it might be a credencial issued by one of the international Pilgrim Associations and recognized by the Pilgrims' Office in Santiago.
Anyway, I contacted them directly to find out, as @dougfitz suggested.
No, @Kathar1na, they haven't replied, and it's been almost two weeks since I contacted them.Did you get a reply from the Pilgrim Office in Santiago?