The Abbey at Cadouin |
Cadouin, a town in the Dordogne region of France , rose
and fell because of a length of cloth.
A shroud, venerated over the centuries by thousands of
pilgrims who came to see it hanging in a glass box in the abbey church, was
proved a fake in 1934. Instead of being the fabric that wrapped Christ’s body
– or, to be more precise, his head - it was found to have been commissioned in
the 11th century for a
Caliph in Egypt . Telltale writing in Arabic, mentioning Mohamed, was the unfortunate
giveaway, after which the Archbishop had no option but to permanently suspend the
pilgrimages.
The town and its faithful were devastated.
Well, of course. However, given that the cloth was in competition at the very least with the Turin Shroud and the Sudarium of Oviedo (some claims
suggest that the Middle Ages were so awash with sheets purporting to have
covered the body of Jesus that one could have opened a very successful holy
laundry) the chances of this being a true relic were always slim.
Cadouin was unmasked and admonished publicly as an impostor. Like cities that were once the seat of power (such as GuimarĂ£es in
Portugal) or seaports that now find themselves stranded two miles inland (such as the Cinque Port of Sandwich in Kent) Cadouin was left high and dry.
Yet, in these days when Cadouin has regained popularity as a tourist site, are we still to mourn its downgrading? Does its fate contain all the hallmarks of an inevitability that has nothing more to say to us?
I think it's too easy to label Cadouin’s
erstwhile mass duping as mere nincompoopery. My heart bleeds for those whose world view
shatters. None of us are immune from such catastrophe. None of us recognise how set is our own pathway
- until the pathway peters out. You
trust. There is betrayal. You have unshakable belief in your
judgement. You are proved wrong. You have faith in your job. Redundancy occurs. You rely on your body – one day, it fails
you. You give yourself fully to
love. A long-held relationship cracks
open.
Pieces scatter.
And you are forced to decide whether to pick
them up again, knowing they can never be shoe-horned into quite the same pattern, or
discard them altogether. Either way, the
result leads you into uncertain terrain.
Thus, for my part, a trip to Cadouin is well
worth it. To confront and remember
fallibility - in all its guises.
That's why it's best to thoroughly live life as long as the moment lasts. Believe in our Caudouins' with all out hearts. And one day when we look back and see they no longer exists. Then we can at least be sure we lived life to the fullest. Perhaps we will feel sentimental, nostalgic maybe even sad? but at least we will not have any regrets. Thank you for sharing these wonderful thoughts. Thierry
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