This week's SojoMail features an article written by Ezra Craker for the latest issue of Sojourners magazine, about how to travel ethically in a fraught tourism industry:
Completely by coincidence, travel writer and translator Shahnaz Habib once joined thousands of pilgrims in Lalibela, Ethiopia. Habib’s trip happened to overlap with Ethiopian Christmas, which brings Ethiopian Orthodox Christians from across the country and world to the town, famous for its medieval rock-hewn churches.
Detailing her experience in her book Airplane Mode, a personal history of travel with a sharp eye for the colonial legacies in tourism, Habib calls Lalibela’s churches “marvels of subterranean engineering.” Carved from red volcanic rock, they sit embedded in the ground, connected by tunnels. The complex of structures was built in the 12th century as an homage to Jerusalem, complete with replicas of Christ’s Nativity crib and tomb.
Habib observed as her fellow travelers lined up around the churches to kiss crosses offered by priests: “A kiss at the top of the cross, a kiss at the bottom, a touch of the cross to the forehead. Hundreds of kisses every hour.” She noted the procedural quality of the ritual.
“To lose oneself in a crowd. To walk the beaten path. To wait and be bored,” she writes. “Perhaps what separates the tourist and the pilgrim is not the reasons for their travel but the satisfaction that the pilgrim finds in what frustrates the tourist.”
The distinction rings true, at least when the two kinds of travelers are thought of as archetypes. Pilgrims humbly search for divine presence, while tourists — especially those from wealthy countries — demand a truncated cultural immersion available in their language, paid for in their currency, flavored with the contents of their pantry. But as Habib lays bare in her book, rarely do travelers of any kind think or behave as stock characters, free of contradiction.
In fact, pilgrimage and tourism are linked. |
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