DAY TEN :::: AM I IN A DREAM? Today
is July 15, 2017 – a Saturday – and, later in the afternoon, the Archdiocesan
Shrine of Señor Santiago de Apostol of the Municipality of Compostela, would
kick off the novena for the town fiesta which would be celebrated on July 25.
What timing? Or that the itinerary for this first-ever pilgrimage of the Camino
de Santiago is just being true to what it was indicated therein. It is easy to
say that but, the truth is, we pushed ourselves hard for eight straight days to
reach this threshold. Yesterday’s leisurely pace – Day Nine – was unexpected. A
bonus!
We started from the St. James the
Apostle Parish in the Municipality of Badian on July 6th and crossed over the
high Southern Cebu Mountain Range in 13 bewildering hours for the other side of
Cebu, where most of the route of the Camino de Santiago is walked. We stopped
and slept in six more parishes located in the most remote places of Cebu and we
have their parish seals stamped on our provisional Camino Passports. On one
occasion we slept under a covered basketball court which was converted into a
chapel, another in a village chief’s home and, last night, in a local resort.
I am the guide for this Camino
Cebu, patterned after its most famous ancestor in Spain, a long pilgrimage trail
of almost 800 kilometers that St. James the Apostle travelled and it has
existed for more than a thousand years. I have dreamed of establishing a Camino
here in Cebu long ago but it remains a dream. But when a priest of the
Archdiocesan Shrine of Señor Santiago de Apostol of Compostela, Cebu suggested
it to me, it became a reality in three months’ time. The Camino Cebu is for
those who are underprivileged and who cannot afford the expensive travel to
Spain. What you will gain here is the same as what you gained for your soul
there. But harder.
I believed I have led the eight
pilgrims to walk more than 150 kilometers of rugged highlands terrain under a
climate that was already harsh before the advent of global warming. This priest
who suggested that Cebu establish a Camino for the poor is Rev. Fr. Scipio
“Jojo” Deligero and he is one of the pilgrims. It is ironic. Fr. Jojo
disdained walking for he has gout growing in each ankle which is very painful,
but he accomplished that distance already in his hobbled pace. In that painful
state, he has already performed his sacerdotal duty for his parish. In the
Camino? He was simply biblical.
Another pilgrim worth mentioning in
length is the incumbent mayor of Compostela. He is the Hon. Joel Quiño. This is
his second term. Before he leaves for private life, he would like to see his
municipality and his constituents earn the honor of being the pilgrimage
destination of the Camino de Santiago of Cebu and for being the namesake of
that famous place in Galicia, Spain. He is aware of that and he made himself
available for this Camino to experience it, despite all the pressing problems
and issues that hound a local executive. He came incognito without a police
escort.
There is the couple Jemmelyn and
Roderick Montesclaros. Then you have the parish lay ministers, Mizar Bacalla
and Roger Montecino, and Alvie Rey Ramirez, a municipal employee, and all are
from Compostela. Last is my subaltern, Jonathaniel Apurado. The only
non-Catholic among us but he found the Camino a good exercise for the body, the
mind, the heart and the spirit. Jon and I are from Cebu City and we are more
identified with our Thruhike of the Cebu Highlands Trail, a route that
traversed over the mountains from the Santander shoreline to Daanbantayan’s cliffs
by the sea, 400 kilometers in 29 days.
All are now wearing the
commemorative t-shirts that we carried through the rugged length and the
unpredictable weather systems of the Camino. The t-shirts were provided by Bro.
Cedee Neo of the Doneo Host Making Community, an ardent supporter of the
establishment of the Camino de Santiago in Cebu. His involvement revolves
around creating liaisons with the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Santiago de Compostela and with our own Archdiocese of Cebu, the Philippine Embassy in Spain, in a few
offices of the Vatican, even engaging in the Camino Portugues together with his
wife, Julie.
After a breakfast of the last two
packs of spicy Korean noodles, a half kilo of rice and the remaining fingers of
chorizo Bilbao, we leave Gatubod Spring Resort, found in the village of Basak,
at 08:35, and proceed on the last remaining kilometers of the Camino to the
town center. We just crossed a dirt road fronting the resort and we are now on
the outskirts of another village of Bagalnga. We need to climb up a hill
through a trail to reach a big cross that was erected and finished there just
recently. In all my travels up and down Cebu, I have not noticed this cross but
I saw it yesterday for the very first time.
We passed by a remote abode with a
small altar infront. The small earthen image of Señor San Roque is broken but
it is vintage. Living there are two elderly sisters, in their late ‘70s, who
are both unmarried. Both were deprived of cash doleouts afforded to senior
citizens of the municipality since both are not registered voters and they have
no birth certificates either. They remembered though that they were baptized in
the parish when they were young. Mayor Joel promised both ladies that he will
personally have their birth certificates and voter’s registration processed and that
they will receive their senior citizen privileges before the year ends.
As was practiced in all my hikes,
Jon and I leave to the elderly ladies some foodstuffs and items which we have
reserved for lunch, to include the extra emergency meals good for one day. The
rest of the pilgrims did so with their untouched snacks. Mayor Joel left them a
little something for their upkeep. Fr. Jojo blessed them and he just opened the
floodgates of grace from heaven on the elderly women and on us all. My backpack
is strangely light as we proceed to the higher heights where the big cross is
located. That goes also for my footfalls. I am excited for this moment spurred
on by my act of charity.
Right in front of me is indeed a
cross but it is about 30 feet high and the trunk is about 6 feet wide. It is
now almost finished except for the landscaping work. I reach it at 09:00. I
learned the story from Fr. Jojo of how this cross came to be. This is a
by-product – an inspiration – of a pilgrimage to Jerusalem which a
well-to-do couple of the neighboring town of Consolacion engaged in many years
ago. The husband had an illness and, before he would leave this world, he would
first cleanse his soul by doing that pilgrimage with his wife.
When they came back to Cebu the
couple planned to dedicate their experience of their Jerusalem visit by
building a huge cross in their own place in Consolacion, then in Liloan. They
were not able to do that and, finally, settled on a barren hill in Bagalnga,
Compostela. Construction of the cross was stalled. In fact, it had even been
abandoned for sometime when the wife suffered an illness instead and eventually
died. To honor her memory, the husband brought all his energies, resources and
time to erect the unfinished project. It became also a monument of love. The
surviving husband is Celso Jordan.
At the base of the cross, I placed
the pebble that I brought with me from my home in the earliest hours of Day One
and the fossilized scallop that I found in Dagatan, Badian, also on that first
day. That pebble represented my transgressions and I carried that weight all
through the crests and troughs of the Camino Cebu. I took a knee before the
cross and prayed for forgiveness. I wept and I felt static electricity run
through my whole body, sending all my body hair on tiptoes. It is a very warm
day but my sweat was cold, dropping on the concrete footing.
From behind me, I heard the
footfalls of the oncoming pilgrims as I remained on one knee. Everyone
reverently placed their pebbles on the foot of the cross and began their
personal conversations with the Holy Spirit. I even notice roses included as
offerings. I slowly back away and leave them in their own privacy. A cloud
passes overhead and shaded the whole place. Cool breeze from the far coastlines
removed a little of the day’s heat. I walked around the perimeter of the cross
and it is well placed. A new landmark for sea travellers.
It is interesting to note that the base of a pillar that propped at its top an iron cross on the route of the Camino Frances became a mound made by pebbles thrown from the many generations of pilgrims. The pilgrims would pick up a pebble
on the way and tossed it there and it would soon become a hill. This I read from a Cadoggan travel guide for
Northern Spain. Our pebbles would soon start another one here in Cebu, perhaps
in the Philippines and, maybe Asia, but it would not be tossed. The triumph of Jesus, represented by a
cross, over sins! The Cross of Triumph.
The cross on the hill was the
climax of the pilgrimage. What goes after here is another leisurely walk down
the lowlands, among communities and into the national highway. We arrive at the
Green Lagoon Park, a seaside resort, at 12:30. We rest for a while as we waited
for our lunch to be served. From here it would just be a 20-minute walk to the
Archdiocesan Shrine of Señor Santiago de Apostol. We arrive there at 13:30
under a pouring rain and we are way too early for the 15:00 Eucharistic Mass
which will be celebrated by Rev. Fr. Gonzalo Candado. We spent the time for
wash and rest. How I wished we have a large censer.
The celebration of the Holy Mass
came at its exact hour, with bells clanging, and we were, at its timely part,
received and presented to the whole congregation and community of Compostela.
We were given white capes with the Cross of St. James printed in red at the
back, locally-sourced scallops signifying our personal pilgrimage and the
Certificate of Completion signed by Fr. Candado and Vice Mayor Fe Abing. Among
those who witnessed the ceremony were family members and friends of each
pilgrim. There was a feast afterward at the rectory and everyone partake of the
food and refreshments.
Thus ended the First Pilgrimage of
the Camino de Santiago in Cebu; in the Year of our Lord, July 15, 2017, at the
Archdiocesan Shrine of Señor Santiago de Apostol, Municipality of Compostela,
Province of Cebu, Philippines. I heeded the call of St. James the Apostle. So were Fr. Jojo, Mayor Joel, Jem and Roderick, Roger, Mizar, Alvie Rey and Jonathaniel.
Total Distance Walked: 9.93
kilometers.
Highest Elevation Gained: 772 feet.
THE CAMINO DE
SANTIAGO IN ITS WHOLE LENGTH
175.18 KILOMETERS
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