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Scherpevheuvel,
Belgium |
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The history of Scherpenheuvel, the Belgium place of pilgrimage, begins with
an age-old legend. Around the year 1500 a shepherd found a statuette of Mary
in an old oak tree on the Scherpe Heuvel (pointed hill) between the villages
of Aarschot and Diest. When he tried to pick up the statuette he stopped as
if petrified. He could not move. His worried master found him a few hours
later, frozen in place, with the statuette in his hand. The master took it
from the shepherd’s hands and placed it back in the tree. Only then could
the man move again. Ever since then Scherpenheuvel has been an important
pilgrimage site. Today, it is perhaps best known for its traditional annual
walk, a walk of atonement during which the pilgrims travel on foot,
beginning their journey in Antwerp. Some 35 miles long, it is often called
“The Great Trek.”
This title is from the collection Pilgrimages of Europe.
Pilgrimages are as old as mankind. The mystical and spiritual nature of a
pilgrimage holds an eternal, mythic appeal to the imagination of many
people. Every year millions of pilgrims of all nationalities, young and old,
set out on these voyages of the soul. The twelve documentaries in the series
Pilgrimages of Europe are experiential journeys to some of the most sacred
routes and holy places throughout Christian Europe.
These half-hour documentaries, richly filmed, look at the spiritual,
cultural and historical background of twelve pilgrimage sites throughout
Europe. However, the people, the pilgrims themselves, are at the heart of
these stories – their purposes and desires, their motivations, and the great
sense of the holy and the sacred which they find on their journeys of faith.
LENGTH: 30 Minutes
ORDER CODE: JM20166V
VHS
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