RT Article T1 De-centring pilgrimage studies: understanding neo-Pentecostal journeys and pilgrimage in Africa JF Journal of contemporary religion VO 38 IS 1 SP 79 OP 96 A1 Pasura, Dominic 1973- LA English PB Carfax Publ. YR 2023 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1839536829 AB This article aims to de-centre the taken-for-granted categories and empirical tendencies in the field of pilgrimage studies by discussing how the phenomenon of neo-Pentecostal journeys and pilgrimage emerges in Africa. Pentecostal Christianity’s rapid growth and development in Africa are now well-known and researched; however, some distinctive patterns of transnational religious circulation and mobilities have so far escaped academic attention. Over the last decade, West Africa has emerged as a Pentecostal spiritual centre for religious pilgrimage, a space where ‘godfathers’ mentor young, mainly male, aspiring prophets from across Africa to perform ‘extraordinary miracles’. It is also a space where politicians, diasporas, and ordinary believers flock for spiritual rebirth and release from the burden of poverty and the quest for healing and prophecy. This article highlights that the neo-Pentecostal journeys and pilgrimage are grounded in indigenous religious worldviews, Pan-African connections, and Africans’ agency, on a continent shaped by violent and exploitative structures and experiences of enslavement, colonialism, and neoliberal capitalism. K1 neo-Pentecostal journeys K1 Healing K1 African Pentecostalism K1 Pilgrimage K1 Pilgrimage studies DO 10.1080/13537903.2023.2170575