Good Shepherd – El Buen Pastor celebrate 20 years of life together

By Mary Morin

The twentieth anniversary celebration of Good Shepherd’s twinning with El Buen Pastor took place through the effort and support of hundreds of parish and citywide individuals and groups.  The visit began on November 8th and concluded on November 16th.

The eight-day visit by Serbando, Marlene and Hilda from El Salvador was a whirlwind of dinners, interviews, meetings, visits to schools, and gatherings.

The momentum began with the Saturday evening Mass, November 10th. Father Francis Hund, Father Tom Kerns, and Father George Seuferling concelebrated. The church was packed.

Following Mass, the third annual Fiesta provided an opportunity to enhance the parish goal of global and local involvement. Holy Name Parish in Kansas City, Kansas catered a Mexican dinner for 350 people. Wally Kisthardt, serving as master of ceremonies, kicked off the evening’s program by singing his original song, “We Celebrate”. Megan Wanccura accompanied him on the saxophone.

On behalf of the parish, Father Francis accepted Buen Pastor’s gift of a painting of the Last Supper. Fifth graders from Good Shepherd School sang several songs. The Fiesta concluded with excited children breaking the two piñatas.

On Sunday parishioners volunteered to serve as translators at each of the Masses. Marlene remarked that it was so meaningful for her to touch the shoulder of those initiated into the RCIA program at the 9:00 a.m. Mass.

A Sunday evening gathering served as an emotional conclusion to the day. Along with Marlene, Serbando and Hilda, Elly Jordan, from the SHARE office in Washington, D. C. and parishioners, Phyllis Zimmer, Rachael Flener, and Ann Suellentrop walked to the front platform barefoot. With the reading of a blessing for each traveler, another person came forward to anoint their feet. Several persons remarked that this reminded them of the story of the woman who anointed Jesus’ feet.

Individuals seated in the audience passed around white crosses. Each person added one or two names to a cross from the list of 32 family members from Buen Pastor killed during the war. The seven travelers each took one cross to pack in a suitcase for their trip to the Vigil to Close the School of the Americas in Georgia the next weekend.

The visitors shared their thoughts with the gathering. “Buen Pastor is one of the best communities in El Salvador because we have a sistering relationship with Good Shepherd,” said Serbando.

“I have six children. “I don’t want my children to leave El Salvador and come to the United States,” said Hilda in her introduction. “The reason we’re able to do our work at UCRES is because of Good Shepherd.”

“The government of our country thinks there is no poverty because we have beans and rice and tortillas. I fear that my children do not get enough of the right foods,” Marlene responded, her voice tearful.

After a full weekend, Monday morning started with an opportunity for the visitors to meet with the editorial board at the Kansas City Star.

“I was so proud of our Salvadorans as they spoke eloquently about their community, political concerns, and the importance of the 20-year sistering relationship,” remarked their driver, Eileen Thoni.

To the attentive group of journalists, Serbando said, “I teach two sessions at a rural school. I work for twelve hours and make $16 a day. I had to work and go to school in order to get my education. I went without food and sleep many times.”

One of the journalists asked what would happen if the United States completely closed its border.

“Immigration would slow decline. We would survive but be poor,” said Marlene

“Currently most people in El Salvador eat meat only once a month. At Buen Pastor we are able to eat meat once a week,” Marlene continued.

The Salvadorans mentioned that in their country only people with power get their voices heard. As they listened to the editors discuss articles for the paper on various community concerns, they learned that our countries have similar problems.

Tuesday night Father Francis provided a typical Thanksgiving feast in his home. Invited guests responded to the question, “What outstanding memory do you have of this week?”

Both Jesse Olivarez and Jeff Flener agreed that the opportunities to get to know Hilda and Marlene and Serbando first-hand topped their list. Their wives, both Rachel and Rachael, were former travelers.

Wednesday was a full day beginning with the all-school Mass. The guests provided principal Ann McGuff with a rosary made by the woman’s group at Buen Pastor. Hilda and Serbando made presentations to all grade levels in the school library and all ate lunch with the 8th grade students.

Marlene met with a group of Familia mothers. (See separate article.)

Later in the afternoon Teresa Aley and Sarah Stephens showed Marlene and Serbando the DVD of the twenty-year twinning. All cried as the pictures from Buen Pastor’s struggle flowed across the screen.

“If we don’t have God in our hearts, we will fail,” concluded Serbando.

The long day was not over. Serbando and Marlene spoke to two sessions of Kids Creed/RAFT. They shared the story of water at Buen Pastor. Through translators, Maria Tagle at the first session, and Esmeralda Peterson at the second,

“Much of the water in El Salvador is polluted. At Buen Pastor, it is clean. Thanks to Good Shepherd we have a pump, which provides water to each house. A new irrigation system carries the used water away from the houses,” said Serbando.

Thursday evening provided the opportunity for an evaluation of the tour.

“I never thought the opportunity to visit the United States was possible,” started Hilda. “Buen Pastor and you gave me this chance.”

“I hope you will forgive us if we made mistakes or didn’t express ourselves well enough,” said Marlene. When told that hundreds of people had made this opportunity possible, she put her hands to her face in surprise. “I have so much to share with my community when I get home. You love me too much.”

And so, tired travelers left their Shawnee family the next morning. Tired host parishioners remembered Serbando’s words from earlier in the visit, “If God wills it, it will go well.”

And it did.

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Mothers

By Mary Morin

Suzanne Egger awaited the arrival of her Familia group*. Nine mothers came with their children and snacks ready to meet their guest Marlene, one of three recent Salvadoran visitors to Good Shepherd.

Through translator, Ann Suellentrop, Marlene shared her story.

“My parents died during the war. I went to an orphanage where the treatment of children was not good. Men raped the girls. I forget so much, and it is sad to remember the bad times. It is part of my journey.

“I went to live with an aunt who moved to Buen Pastor. Often I called her mother.

“When I was 19, I fell in love with Réne and together we had a child, Julissa. When the baby was just three months old, Réne died in an accident. I was 21, alone, with a baby to raise. I thought about leaving but decided to stay in the community.

“Later I fell in love with Jésus. We have a son, Kevin. Jésus is good to the children and to me. I love him very much. We work hard to support our children.

“Jésus works six days a week, 14 hours a day and makes $10 a day. I work two days a week cleaning houses in San Salvador. I make $16 a day. I also make meat pies and sell them in the community.”

Kristina Frank asked Marlene about education in El Salvador.

“Education, public as well as private, is not free in El Salvador. Scholarships provided by Good Shepherd help keep students in school. At El Buen Pastor, high school students receive a scholarship of $385 a year. Middle school students receive scholarships of $275 a year. This covers tuition, fees, transportation and supplies.”

Sarah Jacobson asked, “Are you able to buy good food for your children?” (Later Sarah told me, “It was amazing to hear how her faith has been important to her and keeps her going. Hearing Marlene’s story really put a “face” to it. After listening to Marlene, I think we have greatly impacted many people’s lives in El Buen Pastor.”)

“I do without so that my children can get enough food. But, I fear they do not get the right kind of nutrition.”

“You give from your wants for your children. We give from our abundance. It isn’t the same sacrifice,” responded Sarah.

As the mothers learned what Marlene did to support her family, tears welled up in everyone’s eyes.

The group presented Marlene with a plaque with a picture of Mary holding baby Jesus. “I don’t have things to put on the walls of my home. This is wonderful!”

As the group left Suzanne’s home, some of the mothers pressed money into my hands. ”I only wanted you to hear Marlene’s story,” I said.

“We know but buy something for the children or school supplies, just something.”

I told Marlene what I had received. “Look! We can go shopping!”

“I’d rather take the money so that I can share it with others in the community who have needs too. If that is okay?”

“Yes, please take the money.”

The next day I received an excited phone call from Suzanne. “We talked for an hour after you left. We never understood the twinning relationship before, but we do now. We shouldn’t quit sending money to Buen Pastor for there are still many needs, especially regarding education. We want to sponsor a scholarship as a group. To whom do we send thank you notes for allowing us to have this opportunity to hear Marlene’s story?”

Make me an instrument of your peace passes through my mind. We just provided the opportunity.

One mother spoke.

Other mothers listened.

All were moved by the experience.

The experience will never be forgotten.

*This women’s group meets bi-monthly. For three and a half years they read and studied materials put together by Familia. Meetings typically include Gospel reflection, catechesis, and study of various Papal documents covering topics such as marriage and family, Mary, and prayer.

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Celebrate 25 years of Solidarity with SHARE!

Faith and Hope in a Time of Crisis:  Solidarity for Just Trade, Human Rights, and a Sustainable Environment in
El Salvador Today

 Featuring: Lutheran Bishop Medardo Gomez, and other visitors from El Salvador 

September 15 & 16, 2007
Milwaukee, WI 

See the website for more information!

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Opposition to neo-liberalism

Chicago Public Radio posted this speech by Raul Moreno—Professor of Economics, University of El Salvador, President of the Board of Directors, CIS (Center for Interchange and Solidarity) and Policy Consultant on Social, Economic and Cultural Rights, FESPAD.
 
Interpreted by Leslie Schuld

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An Oscar Romero message

By Ian McRae
Given March 24, 2007 at St. Andrew’s Christian Church

Some years ago, I had the privilege of hearing Dom Helder Camara, then Archbishop of the diocese of Recife and Olinda in eastern Brazil.  A man of the people, Dom Helder Camara always rode public transportation in Recife.  He reports the following experience.

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Salvador Archbishop attacks former US Ambassador

On Friday March 23, 2007 former ambassador to El Salvador, Robert White, was in El Salvador.  He was ambassador there in 1980 and 1981.  While in El Salvador White appeared on a panel at the Jesuit University titled “El Salvador, Fifteen Years Afterwards: Another Reading.” Robert White is President of the Center for International Policy.

Former ambassador White directed his comments  to a recent attempt by government party (ARENA) members in the National Assembly to name Roberto D’Aubuisson  “Meritorious Son of the Nation.”  While the attempt to do this failed, the intention to accord D’Aubuisson this honor shocked not only millions of Salvadorans, but also White.  To those present (and later in a press interview) Ambassador White enumerated documented proofs of D’Aubuisson’s involvement in the death squads which listed people to be assassinated, and in the particular death of Romero.  He offered to provide the ARENA Party this documentation.

Robert White cited the  CIA, State Department and the Truth Commission of El Salvador’s Report in his documentation.  It wasn’t a surprise when the ARENA Party leaders in El Salvador dismissed the documented information.  Truth for many politicians is simply what you declare it to be.  However it was very surprising when after Mass on Sunday  March 25th the Archbishop of San Salvador, Fernando Sáenz Lacalle, said:

“The important thing is that these things (that White says) not be private declarations but rather that they be official.  If they are legal proofs, they should be presented to the court.”

The Archbishop went on to say:

“The ex-ambassador White is a very problematic person.  One has to take into account these characteristics of his personality before paying attention to what he says.*

*Source: El Diario de Hoy, Monday March 26, 2007, page 6.

What is the Archbishop trying to say? These documents aren’t private opinions. They are official documentation:

These documents were presented to the Truth Commission for El Salvador, a United Nations sponsored and Peace Accords mandated commission charged with identifying the worst human rights violations during the civil war and establishing responsibility wherein it was possible.  The Commission declared at the end of its study that Roberto D’Aubuisson was the intellectual author of Archbishop  Romero’s death.   

These are original documents from the archives of the US Government, documentation that occurred at the time the events were happening.

These documents have not been used in any trial in El Salvador because El Salvador has seen to it that no trials take place. These documents have not been used either in the trial of ex- Captain Alvaro Saravia or Robert D’Aubuisson in El Salvador because these men were never placed on trial.

In 1987 Alvaro Saravia was captured in Miami, but the Supreme Court of El Salvador prevented his extradition back to his home country to be tried.  D’Aubuisson died of throat cancer in February of 1992 shortly after the end of the war and prior to the Truth Commission’s Report. 

The Inter-American Court on Human Rights has demanded that El Salvador open the case of the Assassination of Archbishop Romero so that justice can be achieved.  El Salvador has not done so, using the Amnesty Law of 1993 as an excuse, though it’s not an excuse accepted by the Inter-American Court.

In the September 2004 US Federal Court in Modesto, California handed down a decision against ex-Captain Alvaro Saravia of El Salvador.  Saravia, who has passed the years since Romero’s assassination in the USA,  was declared responsible for helping organize the murder of Archbishop Romero with D’Aubuisson and D’Aubuisson was named as the mastermind of this assassination. 

Conclusion

Archbishop Sáenz Lacalle had no objective basis to suggest Robert White’s comments were of a private, not a public or official nature.  In doing so he weighed in with those forces in El Salvador that deny the truth when it is inconvenient.  There is one group in El Salvador that denies the involvement of its founder in Romero’s death: the ARENA Party.   Who and what is Archbishop Sáenz Lacalle supporting?

In labeling former Ambassador White as a problematic person who possesses personality characteristics that detract from his credibility is malicious.
 
Ambassador White is held in high regard in the US and within the human rights and legal communities. Not only is this an unfair judgment, but it involves the dismissal of public documentation deemed of the highest quality by the Truth Commission and US Federal Count in Modesto, California.  Again, who and what is Archbishop Sáenz Lacalle supporting? 

If you believe that these ill informed and slanderous comments by the Archbishop about former ambassador’s white’s credibility regarding the involvement of Roberto D’aubuisson in the death of Archbishop Romero  are unjustifiable,  please send your comments to the Vatican Secretary of State.  Archbishop Sáenz Lacalle’s behavior is scandalous to thousands of Catholics in and outside of El Salvador.

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Remembering Oscar Romero

Romero For flier, go here. (This is a PDF file.)

Archbishop Oscar Romero Prayer Celebration
Saturday,  March 24    7:00PM  
Saint Andrew Christian Church, Disciples of Christ
13890 W. 127th
Olathe, KS
Reception following the service.

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Sobrino censured by the Vatican

National Catholic Reporter’s John L. Allen, Jr. has both reported and analyzed the news that Jesuit Fr. Jon Sobrino has been censured by the Vatican. Sobrino has been one of the great voices for the poor and oppressed of El Salvador.

For the report, go here.

For the analysis, go here.

Pauline Dolan, a member of Visitation parish, is in El Salvador right now and sent this report:

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Sole survivor of El Mozote massacre dies

Rufina Amaya

By Gigi Gruenke

Rufina Amaya, the only survivor of the Massacre of El Mozote entered Eternal Life at 12:40 p.m. on Tuesday, March 6, 2007.  At last she is with her God, her children and husband, victims of the massacre, and all of the almost 1,000 El Mozote massacre victims for whom she worked tirelessly these past 25 years. 

The death of Rufina came as a surprise.  Though not in good health, she was busy meeting with visitors, working in her parish and caring for her family up to the day of her death.  She arrived at the hospital in San Miguel just 10 hours prior to her death, caused by a series of strokes and a final heart attack.  Rufina’s oldest daughter, Fidelia, and  her youngest, Maria, were with her.  Fidelia escaped death because she wasn’t in El Mozote that terrible December 11, 1981.  Maria was born some four years after the massacre.

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