The walk of the pilgrims continues today ad they did during The Middle Ages:
a profound testimony of faith and an exchange between different cultures.
For this reason the Tourism Promotion Agency of Rieti has created the “Saint
Francis Walk” (Cammino di San Francesco), a walk through the Valle Santa of
Rieti, one of the most important places in the history of the Franciscan
Order. The pilgrimage includes visits to the sanctuaries where Francis
travelled to: the Sanctuary of Poggio Bustone, La Foresta, Fonte Colombo and
the Greccio Sanctuary.
It is completed by a climb up Mount Terminillo with a visit to the reliquary
of the Saint, a stop at the municipality of Posta and an excursion to the
solitary and majestic Beech Tree of Saint Francis in the municipality of
Rivondutri.
The itinerary that winds along 80 km of paths and roads immersed in a
spectacular, natural setting in the perfect occasion to renew and revive the
intense spirituality of the Franciscan experience. The paths can be done by
foot, by bicycle, by mountain bike and by horse. It is also possible to
travel by car for those who have difficulty walking or have other ailments.
A subscription and a passport, that will be stamped at each stop on the St.
Francis Walk certify the pilgrimage, making it that much more special. The
wayfarers on the road of Saint Francis' role as the Patron Saint of the
Environment in a land that is, and wants to remain, uncontaminated.
The Walk has the same spirit based on the Franciscan belief of purity and
and poverty and brings back the values of the Rule of the Franciscan.
Order that Saint Francis wrote for his brethren and the whole world from
Valle Santa.
Franciscan sanctuaries in the Santa Reatina valley
Sabina, described and immortalized by writers and poets in Roman
times, was singled out by the great Italian St. Francis of Assisi who
expressed his love of nature and all her marvels in his “Canticle of
Creatures”.
He loved Sabina region above all others, and in particular the area between
the Valley and surrounding heights.
There are four Franciscan sanctuaries in the Valle Santa of Rieti and the
neighboring hills.
They are called the Sanctuary of Poggio Bustone, the Sanctuary of La Foresta,
the Sanctuary of Fonte Colombo and the Sanctuary of Greccio.
The Sanctuary of Poggio Buscone
Leaving the Spoleto Valley, St. Francis went to pray to the hills
overlooking Poggio Bustone, 10 miles from Rieti; the legend tells that, when
St. Francis with his friends first came to the Holy Valley in 1209 to escape
the ridicule and hostility of his fellow townsmen, he greeted the local
people with the simple words “Good day to you good people” and the
villagers, in turn, exchanged the same greeting and have continued to do so
over the centuries.
In the most wild part of the mountain he found two caves where he prayed and
chastised himself in penance; during his meditation he was assured of
forgiveness of his sins and was told that his brethren, the new apostles
would grown in number.
The Sanctuary of Fonte Colombo
The Sanctuary of Fonte Colombo is 3 miles from Rieti, known as the
Franciscan Sinai, because it was here in 1223 that St. Francis received the
final Rule of the Friars Minor from Christ.
Following this the Saint left to
preach in the Orient where he contracted a very painful eye disease.
He tan returned to Fonte Colombo to cure it and here performed other
miracles.
It is natural, therefore, that what attracts us most to this quite peaceful
hermitage it is its mystical atmosphere not its artistic value. The
sanctuary stands on a hill-top still covered to this day with luxuriant
vegetations and ancient Holm-oaks at in altitude of 1788 ft.
There is a small chapel dedicated to the Virgin called “ Cappella della
Maddalena”, which stands in the natural cave where the Saint used to pray,
the so-called “Sacro Speco”, or “Holy Cave”, and in one of the left of the
altar the letter T (tau in Greek) is clearly visible: it represents the
Cross that is, in effect, the Saint's symbol.
The Sanctuary of La Foresta
The Sanctuary of La Foresta is 2,5 miles from Rieti, a shrine on the plase
where St. Francis stopped to have his eyes treated while travelling to Rieti
at the invitation of Cardinal Ugolino, in 1225. This was where Saint Francis
came to get away from his all too faithful followers. He stayed as the guest
of the Parish Priest of the little church of St. Fabiano; it was at this
time that the miracle of the grapevine took place.
The huge crowds that had
gathered to get a glimpse of the Saint wrecked the vineyard, but it
nevertheless produced an exceptionally rich harvest of excellent quality
wine.
The story is depicted in a 16th century fresco, in the portico.