Showing posts with label El Camino de Santiago de Campostela. Show all posts
Showing posts with label El Camino de Santiago de Campostela. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

"The Way" Shows the Way

I'd wanted to see The Way from the moment I first heard

about the Emilio Estevez film about a father (Martin Sheen) 

who completes the "Camino" de Santiago de Campostela on

 behalf of his estramged son, who died on the first day of the

 journey. I knew I would like it, because of my interest in the 

centuries-old pilgrimage. Also because two good friends had

 recently completed the journey. (See my blog post of August

 17, 2011, "The Real 'Camino.'") What I was not prepared for

 was the way the story moved me at a deep level of my being

. I'm not ashamed to say that I wept from the opening scene 

to the roll of credits at the end. I hadn't had such an 

experience since the last time I saw the stage/musical version

 of Les Miserables.


What was it that touch me and created this unexpected 

reaction? In no particular order, I'll share the fruit of my

 reflection.


•  As a father, the thought of losing an adult child;


•  As a believer, contemplation of the mystery of a God who 

 leads us where we never intended to go and do things we

 thought we were either incapable of or disinterested in;


•  As a student of Christian history, to be pulled into a

tradition that places one of the twelve apostles in the 

outermost frontier of the Roman Empire in the second half

 of the first century AD/CE. (Is the tradition historically true?

 I don't know. At this point it hardly matters, in light of 

spiritual benefits accompanying the Camino.) 


•  As the person I am today, a sense of physical loss that I am 

not in condition to make such a journey on foot, even if I had

 a mind to. (Spare me the "You can do anything you want to" 

speech.)


•  As a flawed human being, witnessing the opening and

 unfolding of a closed, self-centered heart to acceptance of

 and acceptance by other imperfect people--fellow travelers 

on the camino and on the journey of life.


I'm sure the film touched me in still other ways of which I am

 not even aware yet.




Bottom line, I highly recommend this film and look forward

to seeing it a second time myself.


You may be interested in viewing the trailer for this camino-based film at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0hy54CpKeqk



______________________
Alfred J. Garrotto is the author of the suspense novel,