written by Jesuit Andrew Hamilton, who was there at the time. I always enjoy reading Fr. Hamilton's thoughtful and
insightful articles.
It confirms my memory that the Archbishop and other younger clergy were at odds with the Catholic hierarchy at
the time over the stand they were taking on behalf of the poor.
"Seeing that the political order was based on the violation of human dignity of the many for the profit of the few, Romero built his ministry as Archbishop on the assertion of the human dignity of each human being, beginning with the least resourceful. The Church had to proclaim God's love for each human being, and so to call the systematic abuse of human dignity for what it was. This inevitably led him to be joined with other simple Christians in being murdered for their faith.
In this divided society some Catholics described Romero as leftist, communist, liberationist and atheist, and projected onto him their own view of a church at war with itself. It was a pity that this view fell on well-prepared ground outside El Salvador."
http://www.eurekastreet.com.au/article.aspx?aeid=20161"Eureka Street" is an Australian Jesuit paper that deals with religion, politics, and the issues of the day.