LONDON (CWNews.com) - The annual pilgrimage to Tyburn in
central London where more than 100 martyrs were hanged,
drawn, and quartered in the 16th and 17th centuries is to
be axed following complaints that it disrupts shopping in
Oxford Street.
For the last century, hundreds of pilgrims have followed
the two-mile route from the Old Bailey to Marble Arch along
which the martyrs were dragged on hurdles or taken by cart
to a gruesome death at the gallows. But this year's walk,
next Sunday, will be the last.
Organizers are under pressure from police to reroute the
procession away from Oxford Street, which has become
increasingly busy on weekends. And they feel that if they
can no longer walk in the footsteps of the martyrs, the
event loses much of its significance.
Bishop Thomas McMahon of Brentwood, who is one of the
leaders of this year's Great Jubilee walk, said it had
become a "casualty of our age."
"It is very regrettable," he told The Daily Telegraph. "It
is a sign of the growing secularism and commercialism of
our age, exemplified by such things as Sunday opening. Life
today is full of so many things, but it is good to have time
to pause and remember. We all respect the tremendous
integrity of the martyrs and, of course, many Protestants
as well as Catholics died during those times. In many parts
of the world, there is more martyrdom now than ever before."
Mother John Baptist, a 77-year-old nun at Tyburn convent
near the site of the executions, at Marble Arch, said the
news had come as "a great blow" to her cloistered community.
"In the past people used to stream to Tyburn to see the
executions," she said. "Now people stream here from all
over the world to visit the shrine of the martyrs. People
are being attacked in different ways today. You don't have
to risk your life, but you can be jeered at for honoring
the martyrs."