Monday, October 19, 2009

Singing to the pilgrims

Some of you may have walked long pilgrim distances
along tracks to sites like Compostela de Santiago.
Journeys of the soul which can give unexpected gifts.

Late this afternoon, three of us decided to walk
up the mountain, past two minute churches
and visit the cave of the Holy Fathers.
We're talking 3 km here, not
hundreds and hundreds of miles.



We didn't take the map (which also serves
as a menu at the local Alpha-Kafenion!)
since we felt we knew the way.

Oh, how we were misguided!

The further from home we got,
the less certain we were of where we were
despite the rather rusty signposts
to the cave we were seeking,
seeming to point to at least
2 different directions at once!


Finally at one point where the signpost could be seen as
pointing anywhere from straight on to straight up (to Heaven?)
I asked my inner voice "Where now?"
"Straight on!" it said, and so "on" we walked.
Very doubtfully - we were supposed to be going
up and here we were going decidedly down!


A local man was walking towards us, walking stick in hand.
We understood he was asking us where we were going.
"Caves?" "Yes!" we said, and he walked with us
back from where we had come, and then
walked with us up the track where the signpost
really pointed. I wondered,
"Why did my voice say Straight on!?"

I caught a few words - "It's late in the afternoon!"
and then after a while he stopped and pointed
his stick at the winding path we should now follow -
a kind of labyrinth up the mountain-side
through gorse and wild flowers and
multi-coloured bits of stone and rock.



We thanked him and he was about to go -
I was still holding his hand -
when he began to sing a pilgrim song.
I felt tears welling up inside as the music
of hundreds of years of orthodox tradition
were sung to me face to face from this old man.
(I learned later that he is the local "kantor."
Now I understood why we were sent
straight on!)

We never quite made it to the caves.
We were too late in the afternoon,
and there were too many newly-erected fences
to keep the sheep and goats out.
(Were we the sheep and goats?)
We would have been walking long past
nightfall.
But the man's song has stayed with me,
filling my bones with music passed down
from age to age and now sung to me.


We arrived back in the village
and the cafe was full of people celebrating.
Ouzo has seldom tasted so good!

Blessings

John

1 comment:

Sharon said...

Hey there, John O., I'm curious, in this picture with the fence, what is that on the right hand side, it reminds me of the little squares in a fishing net, is it on top of the trees? Are those trees? Is that a picture looking down?

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