Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Episode 2

Life on the Sultans Trail begins to challenge the celebrities as Adrian Chiles tells the group he is struggling with the purpose of pilgrimage in the face of their experiences.

In the second episode, the pilgrims are on their final day in Serbia, searching for a monastery hidden in the forests of the Sicevo gorge. After a difficult hike, the group make it to this historic building, where they are greeted by Sister Simeona, one of three Orthodox nuns who preserve the religious sanctuary. After exploring the church, the pilgrims are offered food and drink for the onward journey. Before they leave, Adrian leads the group in a ritual of remembrance, with each pilgrim leaving a candle for a loved one. Later that day, the group make it to a lookout point high above the gorge, where Amar scrambles to the very top for a final sunset photo in Serbia, much to Adrian’s obvious anxiety.

With Serbia behind them, the group travel on to Bulgaria and the capital Sofia. They arrive on Bulgarian Independence Day, marking the moment when Ottoman rule ended here in 1878. Sofia is home to a so-called ‘square of religious tolerance', where all four major religions of the region are represented in proximity. Mim and Amar, both raised as Muslims, visit Sofia’s only mosque. Once there, Amar confides in Mim that he no longer goes to mosque to pray but wants to see how he feels now. Amar meets the imam and tells him how losing his sight made him question his faith.

Meanwhile, Dom takes Edwina and Fatima to visit the museum of socialist art, a memorial to Bulgaria’s communist past. The visit triggers a discussion about the difference between communism and religion with regards to faithful followers and iconography. The group reunite and follow the trail towards the Rila Mountains, the highest in the Balkans.

In the small town of Samokov, Edwina and Dom visit the house of a Jewish family who fled Bulgaria as communism came into the country. Next door is a ruined synagogue, where Edwina describes her Jewish upbringing and describes what seeing the marks of the Jewish people in the region means to her.

Walking back into the Rila Mountains, the pilgrims search for a hermit’s cave dedicated to St Ivan Rilski, Bulgaria’s patron saint. It is believed that if you can pass through the cave and exit via a small hole in the top, then you are pure of soul - and there is much discussion amongst the pilgrims about who will make it through.

Having trekked through forests and over mountains, the pilgrims take the chance to rest their feet on an alpine railway, which takes them along the next section of the trail. During the journey, Adrian instigates a discussion on what the purpose of a pilgrimage is in the face of the clash of religions they are seeing.

58 minutes

Music Played

Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes

  • 00:55

    Madonna

    I'm A Sinner

Credits

Role Contributor
Narrator Lee Ingleby
Composer Joaquim Badia
Composer Matt Nicholson
Production Manager Barbara Masullo
Producer Ed Wright
Editor Guy Crossman
Executive Producer Colm Martin
Executive Producer Caroline Matthews
Director Samuel Palmer
Series Producer Harjeet Chhokar
Production Company CTVC
Editor Michele Hickson
Editor Chris Kenyon

Broadcasts