btn_subscribe-top
btn_give-a-gift
btn_login
btn_signup
btn_rss

Blog

Church Praises Salvadoran President for his Tribute to Murdered Priests

November 23, 2009

by AQ Online

El Salvador’s Archbishop, José Luis Escobar Alas, commended President Mauricio Funes yesterday for his decision to award the country’s highest honor to six Jesuit priests assassinated by the army in 1989—an event that sparked international outrage and helped lead to the war’s end three years later. At a press conference held yesterday in San Salvador, Archbishop Escobar Alas said, “We, as a Church, sincerely see these gestures as a sign of reconciliation, of unity and peace.”

A week ago today—on the twentieth anniversary of their deaths—Funes presented the families of the priests with the National Order of José Matias Delgado. “For me, this act means [we] pull back a heavy veil of darkness and lies to let in the light of justice and truth,” Funes said. “We begin to cleanse our house of this recent history.”

In surprise comments, Minister of Defense David Munguia Payes said that the army would also cooperate in investigations into the deaths if ordered to by the government. Reversing long-standing army policy, the minister resolutely commented: “If the government asks me to open the archives, I will do it.”

The assassinations were carried out by the Salvadoran army on November 16, 1989, at the University of Central America in San Salvador. One of the priests, Ignacio Ellacuria, was a follower of liberation theology and advocated for justice on behalf of the poor. The 12-year civil war, which left nearly 75,000 dead, was brought to an end with a peace accord signed in 1992. 

Tags:: El Salvador's Civil War, FMLN, José Luis Escobar Alas, liberation theology, Mauricio Funes

To read more from Americas Quarterly, sign up for a free trial issue of the print magazine. No risk, no commitment.

To speak with an expert on this topic, please contact the communications office at: communications@as-coa.org or (212) 277-8384.

 
 
Subscribe

Loading...

Bogotá, Colombia
   Anastasia Moloney
   Jenny Manrique

 

Buenos Aires, Argentina
   Juan Cruz Díaz

 

Guatemala City, Guatemala
   Kara Andrade

 

La Paz, Boliviaa
   Cecilia Lanza

 

Lima, Peru
   Naomi Mapstone
   Sabrina Karim

 

London, England
   Daniel Altschuler

 

Monterrey, Mexico
   Arjan Shahani

 

New York, NY
   Christopher Sabatini
   Jason Marczak
   Mateo Samper

 

Ottawa, Canada
   Huguette Young

 

San Francisco, California
   Ruxandra Guidi

 

San José, Costa Rica
   Alex Leff

 

Santa Cruz, Bolivia
   Liliana Colonzi

 

Washington, DC
   Eric Farnsworth
   Liz Harper

 



Loading...


More partners...

Subscribe!