Pilgrim's Postcards: Every Step Is a Story Podcast
Photos View the slideshow of photos [https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/e/2PACX-1vRUDYIrT2_Vg39ukDnkD6EFIIFJH-X7jhytPxoQsg01xHrQDgXSAJOo1LswZWdTi4cB-BVCQNz7lsM0/pub?start=false&loop=false&delayms=3000] that accompany the podcast. Transcript While traveling in larger cities, one expects to find graffiti decorating the walls of buildings and overpasses. No one expects to find it on the walls of a 1400-year-old cathedral. In this episode, graffiti in an unexpected place helped me to find beauty in questions about the deeper meaning of life. I’m Emily, and you’re listening to Pilgrim’s Postcards–the podcast where every step is a story. It was the last day of our trip, and Lisa and I had already had quite a morning. We enjoyed a hike along the Cliffs of Dover and then made our way to Canterbury. I had been looking forward to visiting this city. From the research I had done, it looked like a wonderful town with many shops, restaurants, and cute streets to explore. And of course, it has connections to two important works: Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales and Dorothy L. Sayers’s The Zeal of Thy House. Needless to say, I was excited to reach the city and to visit the historic cathedral that had inspired many pilgrims before me. Even though Lisa and I had already visited St. Paul’s Cathedral, Salisbury Cathedral, and Westminster Abbey, walking into Canterbury Cathedral still filled me with awe. I attend a small house church, and the cathedrals are vastly different from the humble church I attend. No matter how many cathedrals I visit, each one is magnificent and breathtaking in its own way. The people working at the cathedral smiled at me kindly, enjoying my obviously overawed reaction to stepping into the cathedral’s narthex. I spoke with one of the greeters, and I remember asking her what her favorite part of the cathedral is. She told me that it was the crypt which surprised me. (For me, the crypt still sounded like the creepiest part of the building.) She gave me directions to find it, and I promised that I would take a look. I took my time, wandering through the nave, the central space of the cathedral, and admiring the high ceilings, the architecture, and the details. I found the list of the different Archbishops of Canterbury and took a moment to appreciate that the next name on the list would be a woman’s name. I found the spot where Thomas Becket had been murdered at the order of Henry II. As the greeter had told me, the entrance to the crypt was next to the shrine. But also near to the place of Becket’s murder was a tunnel that pilgrims used to reach the spot without having to go through the main sanctuary. And in that tunnel, I found something that surprised me. Someone had graffitied the walls of this sacred building! My mind raced with questions. Who would do such a thing? How in the world were they able to paint graffiti on the walls without getting caught? Why wasn’t it cleaned off? What in the world was going on? As I moved throughout the rest of the building, I discovered more spots where graffiti adorned the walls or the stairs. Eventually, I learned that this was part of an art installation titled “Hear Us.” Participants were members of marginalized communities in partnership with a poet, artists, and the Cathedral curator. The individuals involved in the project were asked the question: “What would you ask God?” Their responses were gathered and transformed into transfers that they could post around the cathedral. What at first seemed like a desecration of the cathedral turned into a beautiful, artistic expression of humanity’s quest for meaning. The questions included… * Is this all there is? * God, what happens when we die? * Is illness sin? * Why does there have to be a meaning to everything? * Does our struggle mean anything? Some of the questions were even written in poetic form: * This is my question for a God up above: why so much violence instead of love? These questions are as timeless as the cathedral itself. Each new generation must wrestle with these as well as other questions about life. The Book of Psalms in the Bible is a great example of how those in the past wrestled with doubts and wonderings about humanity’s purpose and time on our planet. Our questions are a part of our humanity. While trying to find a theme for my teacher creativity project, I was inspired by the British Pilgrimage Trust. Part of their goal as an organization is to make pilgrimage accessible to everyone, regardless of religious beliefs. They assert that “Pilgrimage is a pathway for practices that elevate the experience of moving through a landscape to one that is also an inner journey. The British Pilgrimage Trust believes that such a journey should be made on an individual’s own terms, requiring no set beliefs. It is a pathway that should be open, accessible, and welcoming to all.” Our questions about the deeper meaning of life are something that can unite us. We won’t all have the same answers, but we are each pilgrims, attempting to find meaning in our individual lives. Of all of the questions that I read on the walls of Canterbury Cathedral, the one that impacted me the most was the one asking about why there is so much violence instead of love. Wars have been fought over having different answers to the deeper questions of life. What if we all reached towards love instead of violence? How different would our world be? This wraps up the last episode of Season 1. You can find a link to a photo gallery of the “Hear Us” exhibit at Canterbury Cathedral in today’s show notes. Our next season will begin in June after I return from my pilgrimage to Ireland. This pilgrimage will start at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin and will end with the ancient pilgrimage route up Croagh Patrick in Westport. Thank you for listening, and I’ll see you in June. Credits Music: A Million Faces (instrumental)Produced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/372-a-million-faces-instrumental This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit pilgrimspostcards.substack.com [https://pilgrimspostcards.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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