JUBILEE YEAR for the CENTENNIAL of BLESSED
ROMERO, 2016 — 2017
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With Oscar Romero (left), June 21, 1970. |
Sunday,
March 12, is the 40th anniversary of the martyrdom of Father Rutilio Grande,
S.J. Grande was a Jesuit priest working with poor campesinos in the countryside near El Paisnal, El Salvador. On
March 12, 1977, while driving on the road between El Paisnal and Aguilares,
assassins from Salvadoran security forces killed Father Grande, as well as two
of his campesino parishioners, Manuel Solorzano, 72, and Nelson Rutilio Lemus,
16. Rutilio Grande was a friend of Archbishop Oscar Romero, and this killing is
said to have been one of the key events leading Romero to align his ministry
with the cause of the poor and oppressed in El Salvador.
Today in El Salvador, there is hope that Rutilio will follow Oscar Romero towards sainthood. America magazine published an article this week titled El Salvador holds hope for its saint in waiting, Jesuit Father Rutilio Grande, including a description of the Salvadoran Jesuit priest’s ministry to the poor:
Today in El Salvador, there is hope that Rutilio will follow Oscar Romero towards sainthood. America magazine published an article this week titled El Salvador holds hope for its saint in waiting, Jesuit Father Rutilio Grande, including a description of the Salvadoran Jesuit priest’s ministry to the poor:
Father Grande, a Salvadoran from the countryside, was educated
mostly in Spain and Belgium and other parts of Latin America, but returned to
work among his country’s poor and rural masses. The mission teams he organized
taught peasants to read using the Bible, but also helped the rural masses
organize as workers to speak against a rich and powerful minority that paid
them meager salaries and against the social maladies that befell them just
because they were poor.
Jesuit Father Salvador Carranza worked with the team of
missionaries Father Grande organized, which included Jesuit priests and lay
ministers. They evangelized a wide rural area in El Salvador from 1972 until
Father Grande’s assassination, forming small communities that would read and
discuss the Bible and subsequently other goings-on in their lives.
“Gathering as a community
helped them grow tremendously,” Father Carranza said in an interview with
Catholic News Service. It started slowly. They began fixing a person’s home, a
street, and then they organized a food co-op that helped those who didn’t have
enough to eat, Father Carranza said.
“He always told the
community,” Perla said, that “he
didn’t want to bring the church to them, he wanted them to become the church.”
The
following words of Rutilio are as relevant today as they were in El Salvador of
the 1970s:
Has the wealthy minority - who hold in their hands the economy,
the power of decision, the control of the press and all the media - been
transfigured? There are many baptized in our country who have not completely
ingested the demands of the gospel: a total transfiguration. The Christian
revolution is based on a love which excludes no single human being. Jesus,
after all, enfleshed himself as one of our peasants to share their miseries.
Can we call ourselves his followers and not do the same?
It
was this kind of “subversive” thinking which would turn Rutilio Grande into a
martyr, the first of many priests in El Salvador who would be murdered in El
Salvador’s bloody civil conflict. On March 12, 1977, Salvadoran security forces
ambushed and killed the beloved priest on his way to say mass in El
Paisnal.
The
online periodical ContraPunto published an interview in 2015 with Julio Sánchez, a member of El Salvador’s
National Guard, who admitted to his participation in the 1977 assassination of
Father Grande Here is an English translation of a short portion of the
interview:
What happened on March 12, 1977, when they ambushed Father Rutilio
Grande?
“There were orders we
received directly from the director of the National Guard (General Ramon
Alfredo Alvarenga served as director general of the National Guard from 1975 to
1978). We were selected as eight members
of the guard; I was not in charge of the operation. I think we were six or
eight (members of the guard) that
were selected to fulfill the mission.”
Did you know who you were going to kill? - I asked him, looking in
his eyes for an honest answer, Julio repeatedly moves his hands and head due to
Parkinson’s disease.
“We had been instructed to
eliminate the priest, because he was a communist, he was raising up the
peasants, and spoke ill of the government,” he concludes agitated....
How was he ambushed? Where were you waiting? Were you dressed in
civilian clothes or uniforms?
“We were going plainclothes,
but a few miles before, elements of the guard elements were uniformed. They
informed us that the car was heading toward us, so we waited in the road, and
when it appeared we opened fire, opened fire all at the same time from
different points in the road. I saw the car go off to the side and we continued
shooting.”
Read the rest (in Spanish) here.
On Saturday, March 11, Rutilio Grande is being remembered in a memorial concert in the National Theater in central San Salvador. On Sunday, the 40th anniversary, hundreds will march from the site of the murder on the road from Aguilares, to El Paisnal where Rutilio Grande will be celebrated with a mass and with cultural events.
Additional resources regarding Rutilio Grande:
On Saturday, March 11, Rutilio Grande is being remembered in a memorial concert in the National Theater in central San Salvador. On Sunday, the 40th anniversary, hundreds will march from the site of the murder on the road from Aguilares, to El Paisnal where Rutilio Grande will be celebrated with a mass and with cultural events.
One of his martyr companions. |
- When the Gospel Grows Feet: Rutilio Grande, SJ, and the Church of El Salvador; An Ecclesiology in Context by Thomas Kelly
- Rutilio Grande, S.J., Homilies and Writings, edited and translated by Thomas Kelly
- Photo collection
- Video from El Salvador Television (in Spanish).
- 2007 Rutilio Bio video from the UCA (in Spanish).
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