Description of Project

50 Jubilee Year Pilgrims
--From Hawaii, California, Florida, Louisiana, Oregon, Virginia & Washington --
Move Their Hearts, Minds, Souls and Feet
For You


(1) PRE-DEPARTURE. Undergraduate students from my Intro to Iberian Studies class at the University of Hawaii (LLEAS 360C) researched and presented one of the sites to be visited as their final research project.

(2) PILGRIMAGE. Live reporting (May 29 - June 11, 2010).

(3) POSTSCRIPT. Zaragoza (via Tarrega).
Showing posts with label St. Ignatius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Ignatius. Show all posts

Friday, May 7, 2010

Manresa





Kevin Davison researched the small town of Manresa in Catalonia which he found to have a "very depressing Jewish history." He discovered that "Even before the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition in 1478 there was aggression towards the Jews by the Christians." He also discovered that like Loyola and Javier, this town has a special connection to St. Ignatius of Loyola.

Loyola




Matt Cox had to get creative in researching the town of Loyola, Spain.

In his final paper that accompanied his slides, he writes: "Saint Ignatius is the only thing that ever really happened to this place, or at least the only thing I could really find except for almost the same paragraph just worded differently on a few different websites."

Besides seeing the same paragraph describing the founder of the Society of Jesus, also known as the Jesuits, Matt's searches kept leading him to Loyola schools. His frustration continued: "... My favorite was a Wikipedia page that talked all about a fake car company that was located in Loyola called the Loyola Group and that it had a car that happened to be Franco's favorite." Is this a myth?

Since this class is taught in English students are not expected to know Spanish, or any of the other languages spoken on the Iberian Peninsula. Matt used an internet translator to read articles on the Web in Spanish and in Basque about Loyola but most of the sentences "didn't make sense."

Another discovery was that Loyola comes from the word "lohi" in the Basque language, which means clay or mud. It makes sense when you realize that there is a river that runs through the town.