"On March 12, 1977, the Jesuit priest Rutilio Grande – Romero’s friend and a leading figure of El Salvador’s progressive Catholics – was killed by a military death squad.
| | El Salvador conmemora 40 aniversario del asesinato del padre Rutilio GrandeEl sacerdote Rutilio Grande nació el 5 de julio de 1928 en El Paisnal, fue asesinado en 1977 por los escuadrones... |
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| | 'The people in the parish have been waiting and waiting for this'Archbishop Oscar Romero, now acknowledged by the church as a martyr, has always been so for those who knew him. |
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The incident seems to have triggered something in the once-conservative Romero. He began boycotting government ceremonies, saying police weren’t doing enough to investigate his fellow priest’s murder. In protest, he insisted that Grande’s funeral mass, on March 14, 1977, be the only mass celebrated in El Salvador that day.
| M. Romero: Funeral del P. Rutilio Grande (ciclo C) (14/03/77) |
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For the next three years, Romero was among the loudest voices for justice in a country clearly headed toward civil war. That bloody 12-year conflict pitted the authoritarian, U.S.-backed government against the rebel forces of the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front. At least 75,000 people were killed.
| | El Salvador profile - Timeline - BBC NewsA chronology of key events in the history of El Salvador |
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In weekly masses in the San Salvador cathedral, Romero would dedicate part of each Sunday’s service to discussing “the events of the day” – labor strikes, massacres and kidnappings. Because the government tightly controlled Salvadoran media, his sermons, which were broadcast nationwide on the radio, were a key source of news and information.
| | Romero's Homilies and Writings | The Archbishop Romero TrustHere you will find Romero's homilies in English and Spanish, a recording for those homilies where audio exists, ... |
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In 1980, Romero published an open letter to President Jimmy Carter demanding that the U.S. cease sending military aid to a government that killed its own citizens."