Living traditions

Living traditions policy

Active religious sites are framed first as living sacred places, not as tourist inventory with a devotional theme applied afterward.

Priority

Living practice comes before generic travel framing

Visitor access does not mean all rituals, spaces, or times are open to tourists.
Etiquette, access level, and sacred use should be visible before a reader treats the page like a generic attraction.
Where a place is both heritage-listed and religiously active, the active practice still needs explicit framing.

Access boundaries

The site avoids implying permission that the source material does not support

Restricted or managed access signals are surfaced directly in the page and hub layers.
The product does not assume photography, dress, or ritual participation are acceptable unless the source trail supports that.
Living-site pages are expected to support slower planning rather than checklist tourism.

Related policy

Trust and sourcing should stay connected

Editorial pages

Trust pages linked from the footer

These routes are designed to be read together so the trust model is explicit rather than implied.