Religious 4 min read

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Sacred journeys from Mecca to Jerusalem, the Ganges to Santiago de Compostela

Introduction

[[Pilgrimage]] is among the most universal of human religious impulses. The idea that certain places on Earth carry a special concentration of divine presence — and that traveling to them at cost and effort intensifies one's encounter with the sacred — appears in virtually every major world religion. Today, hundreds of millions of people make religious journeys each year, from the 2 million who circumambulate the Kaaba in Mecca during Hajj to the quiet walker following the 800-kilometer Camino de Santiago in Spain. What makes a place a pilgrimage destination? Typically, it is associated with a foundational event: a divine appearance, the life or death of a sacred figure, a miracle, or a natural phenomenon understood as a manifestation of the divine. The journey itself — the physical hardship, the separation from ordinary life, the encounter with fellow pilgrims — is often understood as spiritually transformative in its own right.

Islamic Pilgrimage: The Hajj

The Hajj to Mecca is one of Islam's Five Pillars, obligatory for every Muslim who is physically and financially able to perform it at least once in a lifetime. Occurring in the first half of Dhul Hijja (the final month of the Islamic Calendar), the Hajj draws approximately 2 million pilgrims to Saudi Arabia. The rituals of Hajj span five days. Pilgrims enter the state of ihram (ritual purity, marked by distinctive white garments) before Mecca. They perform the Tawaf — seven circuits of the Kaaba, the cube-shaped structure at the center of the Grand Mosque, which Muslims believe was built by the Prophet Ibrahim and his son Ismail. The Sa'i (seven trips between the hills of Safa and Marwa) recalls Hagar's search for water for her son Ismail. The Day of Arafat, when pilgrims stand in prayer on the plain of Arafat, is considered the spiritual heart of Hajj. The stoning of the pillars at Mina symbolizes Ibrahim's rejection of Satan. The Umra — a shorter, non-obligatory pilgrimage to Mecca that can be performed at any time — draws millions additionally throughout the year.

Christian Pilgrimage

Christian pilgrimage has a history as long as Christianity itself. The impulse to visit the sites of Jesus's life, death, and resurrection in Jerusalem drove pilgrimage from the 2nd century CE onward.

Jerusalem and the Holy Land

Jerusalem remains the supreme destination for Christian pilgrims. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre — built over the traditional sites of the Crucifixion and Resurrection — draws pilgrims of all denominations. The Via Dolorosa, the route Jesus reportedly walked to his crucifixion, is walked daily by pilgrims observing the Stations of the Cross.

The Camino de Santiago

The Camino de Santiago (Way of St James) is a network of medieval pilgrimage routes converging on the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in northwestern Spain, which houses the relics of the Apostle James. The most popular route, the Camino Francés, covers 800 kilometers from the French Pyrenees. In recent decades, the Camino has been revived as both a religious and secular journey of self-discovery, attracting over 400,000 pilgrims annually.

Hindu Pilgrimage: Tirtha Yatra

In Hinduism, pilgrimage (tirtha yatra — 'crossing to a ford') is understood as a meritorious act that can wash away sins and accelerate progress toward moksha (liberation). The subcontinent is covered with thousands of sacred sites (tirthas), from the great temple cities of Varanasi, Tirupati, and Puri to remote mountain shrines in the Himalayas. The Kumbh Mela, held at four sacred river confluences on a rotating 12-year cycle, is the world's largest religious gathering. The 2019 Prayagraj Kumbh Mela attracted an estimated 200 million visitors over 49 days — the largest peaceful human gathering ever recorded. Bathing at the confluence of sacred rivers during Kumbh is believed to confer liberation from the cycle of rebirth. The Char Dham (four abodes) — Badrinath, Dwaraka, Puri, and Rameswaram — form a pilgrimage circuit encompassing all four directions of India, traditionally undertaken as a lifetime spiritual achievement.

Buddhist Pilgrimage

The Buddha himself identified the four sites most worthy of Pilgrimage: Lumbini (his birthplace, in Nepal), Bodh Gaya (where he attained Enlightenment, in Bihar, India), Sarnath (his first sermon, near Varanasi), and Kushinagar (his Parinirvana, in Uttar Pradesh). These form the core Buddhist pilgrimage circuit. Buddhist pilgrimage has also produced uniquely dramatic expressions: the Shikoku 88-temple circuit in Japan, walked or cycled over 1,200 kilometers, is associated with the Buddhist saint Kobo Daishi (Kukai). Adam's Peak in Sri Lanka, where Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, and Christians all venerate a footprint at the summit, is a rare site of genuine [[syncretism|interfaith pilgrimage]].

Jewish Pilgrimage

In Temple-era Judaism, the three pilgrimage festivals — Passover, Shavuot, and [[sukkot-term|Sukkot]] — required all Israelite men to ascend (aliyah la-regel) to Jerusalem. After the Temple's destruction in 70 CE, formal pilgrimage became impossible, but the prayer 'Next year in Jerusalem' expressed the enduring longing for return. Today, the Western Wall in Jerusalem — the surviving retaining wall of the Temple Mount — is the holiest site accessible to Jewish prayer, drawing millions of visitors annually.

Sikh Pilgrimage

The Golden Temple (Harmandir Sahib) in Amritsar, Punjab, is the holiest site in Sikhism, drawing over 100,000 visitors daily. Unlike many pilgrimage traditions, Sikh theology does not assign mandatory status to visiting sacred sites, emphasizing instead the inner spiritual journey. Nevertheless, visiting the Golden Temple and other historical gurdwaras (takhts) associated with the Gurus is deeply meaningful for Sikhs worldwide.

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