On This Day 1980: American Nuns Kidnapped, Raped & Murdered by U.S.-Trained Salvadoran Death Squad
December 2, 2010 by Brett Wilkins in Latin America/Caribbean, On This Day, Religion, The Best of Moral Low Ground, US Government, War, War Crimes & Atrocities

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Murdered martyrs: (L to R- Maura Clarke, Ita Ford, Dorothy Kazel and Jean Donovan)
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Those who work on the side of the poor suffer the same fate as the poor. So said Archbishop Oscar Romero, the heroic Salvadoran priest who championed the cause of his countrys oppressed masses before being assassinated in March 1980 by a death squad armed, trained and funded by United States.
Archbishop Romeros spirit lived on in Maura Clarke, Jean Donovan, Ita Ford and Dorothy Kazel, four American churchwomen who journeyed to war-torn El Salvador to help the poor.
Kazel was an Ursuline nun who taught indigenous peasants to read and write. She also fed the hungry and taught young mothers how to care for their children. Sister Dorothy greatly admired the unflappable courage of the poor in the face of the deadly oppression they faced on a daily basis. She was just as courageous herself, for she knew there was constant danger everywhere around her.
Maura Clarke and Ita Ford were Maryknoll Sisters, a Catholic order dedicated to overseas missionary work. Sister Maura was generous to a fault, recalled a friend and fellow Maryknoll sister. She gave away virtually everything she had except what was on her back.
More:
http://morallowground.com/2010/12/02/on-this-day-1980-american-nuns-kidnapped-raped-murdered-by-american-trained-salvadoran-death-squad/
[center]GRAPHIC IMAGE:
http://callisto.ggsrv.com/imgsrv/FastFetch/UBER2/00268218-T2
Nuns pray over the American nuns killed by a military death squad in El Salvador[/center]