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This chapter discusses the ethics of rural village spiritual tourism, focusing on preserving intangible heritage under current conditions of modern travel. The purpose is to consider how, as repositories of myth and sacra, villages can uphold their cultural identity against technologisation and commodification. The chapter uses theories from place attachment theory, responsible tourism and heritage interpretation to analyse new ways of exploring moral and spiritual experiences by studying concepts and combining data from multiple secondary sources. The chapter observes a new global trend towards spiritual rural tourism driven by authenticity and self-reflection needs. Several pertinent ethical issues do arise, however, including commodification of culture, mass tourism, empowering the local population and profanation of the sacred. Based on the study, its core is participatory narrative, community tourism and shareable digital designs. This chapter introduces a multi-level ethical model of rural spiritual tourism, filling in a lacuna in current tourist literature. It disjunctively relates religious ethics, technology-facilitated innovation and heritage preservation by location. Policy suggestions are offered for policymakers, tour operators and communities to work together in developing respectful, inclusive and spiritually fulfilling travel experiences through culturally attuned and technologically facilitated models.

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