SEVEN celebrities are set to take a trip like no other throughout north Wales as a BBC show returns to our TV screens.
Pilgrimage is back with a new sixth series returning to BBC Two and iPlayer next month.
Seven well known personalities, of differing faiths and beliefs, will tackle a modern-day pilgrimage, this time along the North Wales Pilgrim’s Way.
Across three hour-long episodes, 'Pilgrimage: The Road to Wild Wales' will follow the celebs as they take a personal journey along a route that celebrates Celtic early Christian saints, with Bardsey Island the fabled ‘Island of 20,000 saints’, just off the western tip of the Llyn Peninsula - as their final destination.
Immersing themselves on this spiritual journey are:
- Wild life presenter Michaela Strachan, who places her faith in the natural world.
- Spencer Matthews, a former reality TV star turned entrepreneur, who was christened Church of England but is still searching for answers to life’s big questions.
- Sonali Shah, a journalist and TV presenter who was raised in a Jain household.
- Comedian Eshaan Akbar, a lapsed Muslim
- Amanda Lovett, a practising Catholic, who catapulted to public attention in the first series of BBC’s The Traitors.
- Actor Tom Rosenthal, star of Channel 4’s Friday Night Dinner, who calls himself ‘areligious’
- TV personality and former model, Christine McGuinness, who is spiritual but doesn’t practise one particular faith.
- Created in 2011, the North Wales Pilgrim’s Way is linked by ancient churches dedicated to sixth and seventh century saints, but also takes pilgrims through outstanding places of natural beauty in the mountain ranges of Eryri, also known as Snowdonia, and the North Wales coast path.
Travelling for two weeks on foot and by bus, the seven celebrity pilgrims start their 220km adventure at Flint Castle on the bank of the Dee Estuary, and follow the coastal path to Greenfield Valley and the official start of the pilgrim way.
The pilgrims will be faced with challenging paths and climbs as they traverse north Wales, tackling the foothills of spectacular mountain ranges, as well as taking on England and Wales’ highest peak Yr Wyddfa.
Carrying their own backpacks, they’ll sleep in basic accommodation from a caravan to a climbers’ hut, as well as experiencing an eco-retreat in an ancient oak forest and a Buddhist meditation centre.
Their final destination is Bardsey Island, or Ynys Enlli, which means ‘isle of currents’.
It was a popular destination among early Christian monks, who believed Bardsey was the end of the world; a place where the distance between heaven and earth becomes intangible and so becomes a place of guaranteed resurrection.
Spencer Matthews, 35, said: “A pilgrimage is when you walk and sleep on church floors and eat dead rats and stuff, which I’m looking forward to. I’d be pretty low in the faith knowledge bracket, but I’m on a quest to broaden my knowledge and religious horizons. I’m an open mind, an open book.
"I want to learn about different faiths, cultures and religions and develop a firm understanding of my faith and how it can potentially play a larger role in my life.”
Christine McGuinness, 35, added: “Since my autism diagnosis, it’s really made me want to grab opportunities with both hands. I want to say yes to more things, things that I would always say no to, because I find socialising quite awkward.
"I don’t really like being pushed out of my comfort zone , but I’m realising more and more that I want to live, I want to do more things, I want to have good memories, I want to make friends, I want to learn more about other people, and the only way I can do that is by pushing myself a bit.”
Michaela Strachan, 57, said: “I think this pilgrimage is going to be really good for me. These days we all tend to live busy, complicated lives, and what I love about walking, is all you’ve got to think about is putting one foot in front of the other.
"I find it very cathartic, it's my form of meditation. There’s a simplicity to just walking. Walking, thinking, taking time to connect with nature. I guess that's my form of spiritual engagement.”
Amanda Lovett, 56, said: “They say that if you go on a pilgrimage, there’s a hope that by the end of it there will have been some sort of realisation, so I’m looking forward to finding mine!
"I do have a strong Catholic faith. I still pray, and I believe there’s an afterlife, but I’m excited to explore other people’s faiths and religions and how they view life. I’ve always been the mum, the gran, the worker, and I sort of forgot about me. I’ve done school runs for 32 years, and I’ve found my time now. I’m looking forward to learning about myself, digging deep and processing and seeing how I’ll evolve in the future.”
Eshaan Akbar, 39, added: “Why am I doing this pilgrimage? I’ll be honest, I think it’ll be fun, believe it or not. I’m not a great fan of walking without a purpose, I don’t like hikes, I don’t like going up and down different types of terrain, I don’t like sleeping in uncomfortable situations.
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"My immigrant parents worked way too hard for me to start fetishizing poverty by choosing to make my life too difficult. I’m really looking forward to the experience but I can’t promise that I won’t moan for most of it.”
Sonali Shah, 43, said: “It felt like the opportunity of going on a pilgrimage like this came at the right time in my life. I grew up in a liberal Jain, East African Indian household in North-West London, where faith, race and culture were very intertwined.
"While I have always been comfortable with who I am and the way I live, in recent years, with my kids asking more questions, I realised that using the word agnostic hasn't been quite right. I was also curious about what, if anything, I could add to the party as someone who was born into a faith that many people have never heard of...”
Tom Rosenthal, 36, said: “I’ve always been interested by anybody with any thoughts as to what it is we are all doing here. It’s fairly confusing and if I spend all my time watching Arsenal and the The Traitors I’m never going to find out.
"Dedicating myself to a pilgrimage for two weeks is a wonderful opportunity to reflect upon my spirituality and to make a TV show my grandmother will actually enjoy watching.”
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