This essay explores the relevance given to the desert in religious thought and experience from a variety of perspectives and beliefs. It has been said that ‘every desert has its hidden springs’, but a journey there often entails hardship and suffering. From time immemorial the search for God, almost in its purest form, has compelled people of many cultural and religious backgrounds to ‘take refuge’ in the desert, in an attempt to reach nearness to God, or perhaps to re-discover themselves . Contemporary society, experiencing more than ever the conundrum of ‘being and nothingness’, still finds itself searching for ‘something’ in spaces of ‘liminality’. Myths relating to the idea of ‘desert’ in Ancient Egyptian, Sumero-Accadian and Semitic li...