Published on the blog of The
Great Climate March: www.climatemarch.org, May 2014 and the e-magazine www.wildwomanrising.com/category/volume-2-issue-8/
“Pilgrimage:
a journey or search of moral or spiritual significance. Typically a
journey to a shrine or other location of importance to a person's
beliefs and faith, although sometimes it can be a metaphorical
journey into someone's own beliefs.”
I have joined the Great Climate March on its link between Santa Fe and Taos, New Mexico. I trudge breathlessly, head down, toward our next
camp:
the parking lot of El Santuario de Chimayo. A Roman Catholic Church
and National Historic Monument in New Mexico, it is famous for
miracles
of healing.
I
look forward to baptising
my feet in the pure cold stream that gurgles
behind the church. Cattle in the pasture that borders the far edge of the water look up as I limp toward them. Although
I've trained to hike
the distances
expected on
this march,
I've not trained to the pace of walkers
who have been on the road for two months already. I hurt all over; my
joints are stiff; the soles of my feet are burning.
The
High Road sees pilgrims and
seekers
of many kinds. I have been studying the descantos, the roadside
shrines of white crosses, plastic
flowers
and sometimes stuffed toys which mark a soul's passing after a
traffic accident. And
I've
been avoiding discarded syringes, broken bottles and crushed beer
cans all
day. My
eyes on the red pumice gravel, I
nearly run into a marcher
holding up a sun-faded rosary he's found on the side of the road. He
offers it, and I, who have recently misplaced my Buddhist mala (but
not my Hindu mantra, the chanting of which keeps me going on the
uphill) know it's meant for me. Every tenth bead is a plastic picture
of our Lady of Guadalupe, the Christianized Aztec earth goddess,
Tonantzin and Mother Goddess of this land. I remove the broken wooden
cross attached and wrap the
beads
around my wrist, grateful for this
symbol
of protection.
It
won't rain tonight. I lay out my sleeping bag in
the new grass at
the edge of the parking lot
so as to see the stars. Or
even a UFO! I have cheerfully explained to curious
east
and west coast
marchers
why the cattle warning road
signs we see have flying saucers added. They do not seem to share my
delight
with
paranormal trivia and
grim humor
when I describe
the spate of mysterious
cattle
mutilations and
strange lights
that
occurred in the
70's
and
sometimes even now.
What
lover of myth could not love New Mexico?
After
exchanging a foot massage with a fellow marcher also
old
enough to remember the Peace March for
Nuclear Disarmament
in
1986,
I
explore
the
shrine.
While others
cut carrots
for dinner, attend a council meeting
or play in the stream, I find myself alone in the dim chapel. Its
shabby
filigree
and folk art style portraits of bloody
martyrs
and saints
weave
a spell of sadness around me. A small room to the left of the altar
holds the crutches of those healed at this place – the “Lourdes
of New Mexico”. Ironically, this overnight spot is where I will
lose the
new trekking pole on which I leaned so heavily today as I tried to
keep
up. Philosophically, I later think that perhaps the displaced patella
of
my right knee might be miraculously healed now that the expensive
pole
has been sacrificed. Maybe
my walking
stick
will end up hanging here among the crutches!
Magical
thinking (and
alien encounters)
will eventually get to you if you live in the “Land of Enchantment”
long enough.
In
the shrine room, a foot and a half diameter hole in the rock floor
invites pilgrims to trowel a bit of the ”holy dirt” to carry with
them for luck and health. I like the fact that it is called holy
DIRT, not “soil” or “clay”, “caliche”
or
“sand”, just good old honest “dirt”. I
take
a pinch for my pocket.
I
asked a
marcher
one day, how she felt about walking through the back country Pueblo
lands without seeing the public, when a goal of the March is to raise
awareness. She answered that it was important to experience what we
were actually marching for; to experience the bones of the land
without its overlay of cities, farms, roads; to get a small taste of
what it must be like to have some harmony with natural forces; to
feel a little of what we have lost.
Pilgrimage
may be thought of as the experience of finding
a holy place. But it is not a journey to Eden. Transcendence does not
come without the understanding of suffering. On this march there is
cold, exhaustion, pain, arguments, tears, frustration, anger and
grief
along with the laughter, love, wonder
and beauty. Three
days hence, children we marchers
have met, will have fallen to
their deaths in a plane over a New Mexico
forest fire. On that same day, a peacock at our ashram campsite will have
spread
iridescent feathers in challenge to a rainbow. And the ubiquitous LYFs
(little yellow flowers) of the desert roadside will remind us that
life goes on somehow. It will go on without or despite us. Pilgrimage
is an embracing of the holiness of it All:
the holiness, you
could say,
of Dirt.
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