’This volume provides fresh insights into the relation between religion, identity and place in Eastern Europe. It challenges stereotypes about society, religion and politics by bringing together seminal ethnographic studies on a wide range of pilgrimage practices that can be observed today.’ Maria Couroucli, Comité national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), France
Introduction: crossing the borders, John Eade and Mario Katić; Part I Creating New and Reclaiming Old Religious Homes: From the chapel on the hill to national shrine: creating a pilgrimage ‘home’ for Bosnian Croats, Mario Katić; Pilgrimages to Gökçeada (Imvros), a Graeco-Turkish contested place: religious tourism or a way to reclaim the homeland?, Giorgos Tsimouris. Part II Inter-Religious Dialogue and Intra-Religious Competition: Pilgrimage site beyond politics: experience of the sacred and inter-religious dialogue in Bosnia, Marijana Belaj and Zvonko Martić; Competing sacred places: making and remaking of national shrines in contemporary Poland, Anna Niedźwiedź. Part III Reconstructing Religious and Secular Space: From religious to secular and back again: Christian pilgrimage space in Albania, Konstantinos Giakoumis; Sterilization and re-sacralization of the places of secular pilgrimage: moving monuments, meanings and crowds in Estonia, Polina Tšerkassova; Secular journeys, sacred places: pilgrimage and home-making in the Himarë/Himara area of Southern Albania, Nataša Gregorič Bon. Part IV: Concluding thoughts, Glenn Bowman. Bibliography; Index.