For decades, pilgrimage has largely been perceived through the lens of travel. Flights. Hotels. Transportation. Packages. Schedules. But beneath the surface, something much larger has been quietly evolving. Every year, millions of pilgrims move across borders, airports, transportation systems, hospitality networks, languages, regulations, digital platforms, and operational ecosystems. What was once viewed primarily as a spiritual journey is increasingly becoming one of the most complex mobility ecosystems in the world. And yet, much of the conversation still revolves around selling trips. Not systems. Not coordination. Not infrastructure. This is where a major shift is beginning to emerge. The future of pilgrimage may no longer be defined only by where pilgrims go — but by how intelligently, ethically, and responsibly the entire ecosystem supports them. Because modern pilgrimage is no longer simply about movement. It is about infrastructure.…