Repression:
the recognition of human rights (continued)
excerpted from the book
Cry of the People
The struggle for human rights
in Latin America
and the Catholic Church in conflict with US policy
by Penny Lernoux
Penguin Books, 1980, paper
p41
Revolution in the Ranks
The emphasis of the Medellin documents
on Christian rather than t political values was fundamental to
the Church's declaration of independence from the state. Although
frequently in the past Christianity has appeared in ideological
guises, it is essentially a critical discipline, a constant call
for justice. By denouncing poverty and social injustice at the
cost of political influence and privilege, the Latin-American
Church could claim, for the first time in its history, that it
was the conscience of all Latin-American Catholics, not just a
rich minority.
As events soon proved, however, few of
the bishops present at Medellin recognized what this declaration
of independence meant. No one will argue (though some may privately
believe) that hunger and illiteracy are good things; thus the
bishops were easily persuaded to denounce such injustices, having
already been primed by Vatican II, Pope Paul's Populorum Progressio,
and their own experiences. In any organization the most intelligent,
dynamic sectors tend to dominate; at Medellin these were the progressive
bishops like Larrain and Camara and the young technicians of CELAM.
The majority of the prelates merely followed their lead, unable
to sense any contradiction between their own ideas and the documents
they signed. Most missed the heart of the matter: that the Medellin
documents were a revolutionary call to work for social justice,
placing the Church in open conflict with the moneyed classes that
for centuries had been its political and economic mainstay. There
were no platitudes or concessions-the gates were wide open.
The first shock to hit the hierarchy was
revolution in the religious ranks. Throughout the 1960s there
had been a confused, sterile debate over the efficacy of violence
and guerrilla warfare among young Latin-American leftists in universities,
high schools, and trade unions, who mistakenly believed that Fidel
Castro's guerrilla tactics could be successfully repeated in the
rest of the hemisphere. The leftists' theory was quickly disproved
in Venezuela and Peru, where rural guerrillas were destroyed by
the military in, respectively, 1962 and 1963. Venezuelan guerrilla
leaders privately admitted that they were defeated primarily because
they could not elicit the support of suspicious, conservative
peasants who had not the slightest idea what the university-educated
guerrillas were talking about. Although the odds were heavily
against guerrilla ventures, Latin-American university students
remained unconvinced- during most of the decade; so, too, did
the Pentagon, which based its Latin-American military training
on counterinsurgency techniques, to the lasting grief of the civilian
population.
Many of the best-educated priests either
worked on university campuses or were involved in programs that
included students, and because of this association they became
infected by the idea of violent revolution. When the student guerrillas
were wiped out in country after country, the priests began to
fill the gap. Very few actually joined the guerrillas, but a well-publicized
minority openly upheld partisan positions in favor of socialist
organizations, frequently participating in vociferous confrontations
with the local authorities and with other members of the Church
Medellin was like a red flag waving them into action, although
its documents deliberately skirted any suggestion of a political
solution and certainly could not-be considered a manifesto for
violent revolution.
These combative young religious could
put their own interpretation on Medellin, no matter what the bishops
said, because of the institutional reforms of Vatican II. In an
attempt to achieve more democracy within the Church the council
had thrown out many of the old canonical traditions of clerical
obedience, and once those were gone, priests and nuns in growing
numbers chose their own ideas and type of work. In Latin America,
where there is only one priest for every 5,891 Catholics (in the
United States the ratio is one to every 827) there are many more
jobs than clergy. So, as a left-wing Peruvian priest put it, "Any
bishop who doesn't like what we are doing can lump it, because
there is always another bishop who will be glad to have our services."
Bereft of the old disciplinary rules and
confronted by secularism and socialism, Latin-American priests
and nuns went through a painful period of confusion and upheaval.
During the late sixties more of them left the Church to marry
than did the religious of any other continent.
Priests formed left-wing organizations
in seven countries, some doing so in open support of radical parties
or governments, as in Argentina, Chile, and Bolivia. And in several
dioceses there were ugly, sometimes violent clashes between priests
and bishops. Thirty diocesan priests in Mexico demanded the resignation
of Bishop Leonardo Viera Contreras, and in Maracaibo, Venezuela,
twenty-two pastors called on Archbishop Domingo Roa to resign.
Several hundred priests and laymen petitioned the Guatemalan Congress
to expel Archbishop Mario Casariego, cardinal of Guatemala City;
in Argentina a group of priests from Cordoba and Rosario demanded
the dismissal of Bishop Victorio BonamIn, chief military chaplain.
Similarly, activist priests in Rio de Janeiro and Peru insisted
on their right to elect the local archbishop. Chile's left-wing
religious movement, Christians for Socialism, attacked Santiago's
Cardinal Raul Silva, while in Rosario, Argentina, Archbishop Guillermo
Bolatti and thirty priests belonging to the Third World movement
engaged in a mud-slinging match that lasted three months. Dissident
priests also demanded the removal of the papal nuncio in Bolivia;
in Peru they actually prevailed on the hierarchy to blackball
Papal Nuncio Romulo Carboni. Although the majority of the militants
were leftists, there were also cases, as in El Salvador, where
conservative priests demanded the removal of a progressive archbishop.
With the exception of Peru, none of these
radical groups achieved its aims, religious or political, and
that was because many of the "new utopians," long on
theory but short on political savvy, tilted with adversaries whose
intelligence and resources they greatly underestimated. Moreover,
they were "arrogant and narrow-minded," said a progressive
U.S. missionary, who argues that the militants' insulting attacks
on the hierarchy and their know-it all attitude toward religion
and politics alienated not only the bishops but the majority of
priests and nuns as well.
The religious rebellion gave the bishops
a sharp jolt, and, under the influence of the conservatives among
them (particularly the Colombians, who had raised the lone dissenting
voice at Medellin, they began to worry about what they had wrought.
The idea that Marxist analysis had been used by CELAM theologians
and sociologists to reach some of the Medellin Conclusions was
particularly galling and confusing. While by now the bishops had
no love for capitalism, instinct and tradition made them wary
of anything with socialist connotations. And then, of course,
everyone could see what trouble poor Cardinal Silva was having
in Chile with Christians for Socialism. There was no telling where
the Church would find itself if such shenanigans were allowed
to continue.
By 1972 many of the bishops were in hurried
retreat. The progressive prelates who had engineered Medellin
were voted out of their CELAM posts, and the think tanks that
had nourished the theology of liberation were either closed or
restaffed. The retreat might easily have become a rout had the
region's armed forces not intervened in the nick of time, swinging
the balance back in favor of Church progressives by unleashing
a reign of terror unequaled in Latin-American history.
While terror had long been an instrument
of repression in such old-fashioned military regimes as Stroessner's
Paraguay and the Somoza dynasty of Nicaragua, it was not scientifically
applied until the late 1960s when Brazil developed sophisticated
systems of surveillance and torture and a geopolitical doctrine
to rationalize the imprisonment, murder, and exile of political
dissidents. This was the other side of Brazil's "economic
miracle," which supplied the money and technology to computerize
repression.
The Nixon administration and corporate
business hailed Brazil as a model for development in the Third
World, but Church leaders were not convinced. On the contrary,
progressive prelates in Brazil, Paraguay, and Mexico warned their
colleagues that Orwell's 1984 was almost upon them. But because
these men had been the architects of Medellin, their warnings
went unheeded. Few Latin-American bishops had experienced the
sort of "round-the-clock persecution" Helder Camara
suffered in Brazil; most had other, more pressing diocesan problems,
including rebellious priests. As far as these bishops were concerned,
the "fascist menace" in Brazil was a figment of the
communists' imagination. Then too, Brazil was far away, both physically
and culturally, and what happened there seemed unlikely to influence
some small parish in the Andes or Central America.
Nor was there any reason to perceive the
threat. Despite its influence on Latin America, Vatican II was
essentially a European event, and very few Europeans seriously
believed that fascism could rise again. Council delegates took
Western Europe's mix of liberalism and social democracy as their
political reference and applied it to the developing countries.
Despite their criticism of social injustice in Latin America,
neither Populorum Progressio nor Medellin attempted to analyze
the economic and political background responsible for such conditions.
This view prevailed until September 1973,
when Chilean President Salvador Allende was overthrown in one
of the bloodiest coups in living memory. His downfall was a milestone
in Latin American history, the ultimate proof of the fallacy of
peaceful revolution. The Chilean experience also forced the Catholic
Church in Latin America to take a good look at what was happening
in its midst.
Unlike Helder Camara and the other bishops
of northeastern Brazil who made no secret of their radical leanings,
Chile's Cardinal Silva has always opposed Marxism. During the
Allende administration, Church-state relations were correct but
cool, with Silva steadfastly refusing to condone the partisan
politics of Christians for Socialism, even though his support
would have improved the Curia's standing with the government.
The cardinal's unwillingness to compromise with either Left or
Right greatly enhanced his prestige within the Latin-American
Church and in Chile itself, where in the last, tense months before
Allende's death, he became the chief intermediary between the
hostile Christian Democrats and the ruling Socialists. That Silva
failed to avert a coup in no way diminished his reputation as
a diplomat of intelligence and integrity. Thus Chile's military
junta committed a terrible blunder when it launched a smear campaign
against this aging but resolute man.
The suggestion that Silva was unpatriotic
and a fellow traveler merely because he defended human rights
focused the Latin American Church's attention on political realities
as no amount of persecution of Helder Camara had done. Camara
was the "Red Bishop" of Brazil; Silva, a man of the
middle. By attacking the political center of the Church, the military
forced the moderates back into the ranks of the progressives-only
now there was no doubt of what was at stake.
As history has repeatedly shown, totalitarian
regimes soon treat all critics as enemies of the state, even those
who supported the regime's rise to power against a real or imagined
threat, such as Marxism. Thus many of Chile's Christian Democrats
came to rue the day they had encouraged the generals to overthrow
Allende, since, contrary to their expectations, they suffered
as much repression as did the Socialists and the Communists. The
experience of repression, like the experience of living in a slum
or a backward village, almost always provides a radical political
education. Things that were taken for granted, such as food or
freedom, no longer exist, and inevitably one is forced to ask,
Why? In the Church's case, the bishops asked themselves why laity,
priests, and nuns were being imprisoned and tortured and murdered
in Chile, and a dozen other Latin-American countries, merely because
they objected to the lack of such political freedoms as the right
to organize a union, or because they were trying to improve the
living standards of the masses. And by studying the reasons for
this repression, many bishops came to the conclusion that they
had been right after all to take a hard line at Medellin; only
it now appeared that the Medellin documents had not been tough
enough.
Cross and Sword
Chile's aping of Brazil, and the emergence
of a similarly repressive government in the once-proud democracy
of Uruguay, gave credence to the earlier warnings of the bishops
of northeastern Brazil, and the Church seriously began to question
capitalism's model of development in Brazil, with its anti-Christian
"Doctrine of National Security." A mixture of creole
militarism, European fascism, and U.S. McCarthyism, the doctrine
is a compendium of complex arguments that, when closely examined,
turn out to be an excuse for Manifest Destiny and a colonial society
embellished with the technological trimmings of an Orwellian state.
Thomas Hobbes, the seventeenth-century English philosopher, is
generally cited as the inventor of the doctrine's model of an
all-powerful state that guarantees national security in exchange
for the people's freedom. But Hitler's Nazism and Mussolini's
corporate state, modern refinements of Hobbes's theory, also contributed
to the doctrine's development, as did cold-war politics and the
Pentagon's promotion of the Latin-American military as "nation
builders."
Developed at the Brazilian Advanced War
College in the l950s, these ideas stemmed from the "science"
of geopolitics, which, as its name implies, studies the interrelationship
of geography and politics. Brazilian geopolitics start from the
political premise of a permanent world war between the forces
of communism and the West. Because by size and geographical position
Brazil dominates the South Atlantic, it has a duty to keep that
part of the world "safe for democracy and free enterprise."
A corollary of this assertion is that Bolivia, Paraguay, and Uruguay
should become satellites of their much larger neighbor, and that
relationship has been achieved by economic imperialism and "living
frontiers" - that is, by Brazilian colonists invading poorly
protected border lands in areas like the Upper Parana River basin
of Paraguay. "Democracy," one realizes, is a relative
term, like the word "Christian," which the generals
so frequently invoke to describe their regimes. Along with "science,"
they are the necessary, if merely verbal symbols of Western civilization.
Once the permanence of world warfare is
assumed, national security becomes the first priority of geopolitics.
Individual rights are sacrificed to the power of the state, since
only it can defend | and develop the nation. Critics of government
policy are considered traitors because in wartime opinions are
weapons and everyone is either a friend or a foe. Civilian politicians
having proved | inept in government, only the military can run
the state and press | the war against international communism.
This view of the world, which could be
straight out of a Nazi primer, is shared by the governments of
Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, Chile, Bolivia, Argentina, and, to
a lesser extent, Colombia and Peru. (The Central-American dictatorships
did not bother to dress up repression in such pseudoscientific
frills.) Brazil has provided the chief ideologists, the most famous
of whom is General Golbery do Couto e Silva, but Chile's General
Augusto Pinochet, a professor of geopolitics before he assumed
the presidency, is aIso known to be expert in the subject.
Inevitably, the formation of these military
states has followed a pattern. Usually an all-powerful national
security council is drawn from the chiefs of the armed forces;
it then names the President and his Cabinet and sets national
policy. The council is served by a national intelligence network
answerable only to the President. All independent political parties,
labor unions, and student federations are outlawed, and anyone
critical of the regime is persecuted as a "communist subversive."
Punishment ranges from imprisonment or exile to loss of job and/or
smear campaigns by the government-controlled media. Following
Argentina's example, several of the regimes have dispensed with
the complications of police arrest, and "enemies of the state"
are now kidnapped and disposed of by groups of unidentified men.
Attempts by family or friends to trace the victims are futile,
since the police deny all knowledge of their existence. (According
to diplomatic sources, an average of thirty persons a day "disappear"
in Argentina; Chile's Catholic Church has calculated that some
two thousand Chileans were thus swallowed up in the four years
following the 1973 coup.)
Catholicism plays a crucial role in this
new military order, not only because of its influence among the
masses, but also because the Church has provided the moral legitimacy
for authority in Latin America ever since the Conquest. Hence
the archbishop must be present at the dictator's inauguration,
a High Mass marks the regime's first year in power, and other
such symbols of Church-state collaboration are scrupulously observed.
Like the Spanish conquistadors, Latin America's generals feel
that the Church should be an active agent for their regimes, not
because they necessarily believe in Catholicism or any other religion,
but because Christianity is part of Western civilization, the
defense of which is their reason for being.
Like France's schismatic Bishop Marcel
Lefebvre, who wanted to undo the reforms of Vatican II, this cross-and-sword
Christianity places heavy emphasis on rituals and individual piety
at the expense of Christian solidarity and a commitment to social
and economic justice. It is also an extremely political concept
of religion, empowering the military regimes, in the name of Christianity,
to ostracize any Christian who expresses or supports popular aspirations
within the Church, since these aspirations undermine national
security and, again, Western civilization. This repression is
accompanied by a great deal of flag-waving, nationalism serving
as a convenient pretext to censor or ban critical Church publications
supported by European and North American religious groups and
to expel foreign priests, who comprise one third of the Latin-American
clergy.
But despite promises of government protection
and financial aid in exchange for religious support, the mainstream
of the Church has refused to adopt this view of Catholicism, not
only because it is basically un-Christian but also because, after
Vatican II and Medellin, it is outdated. Even if the bishops had
been willing to turn back the clock, to do so would have lost
them a majority of their communicants and their religious base.
After two decades of decline-in vocations, Mass attendance, and
lay participation in Catholic organizations-the Church in Latin
America is at last experiencing a renaissance that is directly
related to its commitment to social justice. To renounce that
commitment would be akin to institutional suicide, particularly
since so many priests and nuns-those responsible for the day-to-day
functioning of the Church-have chosen to work with the poor.
At first glance, this alliance with the
people might seem unrealistic because, under the Doctrine of National
Security, individuals do not count in the all-powerful state and
therefore a people's Church would seem to have neither prestige
nor power. But, says Chilean theologian Segundo Galilea, the crucial
point missed in all the geopolitical double-talk is that "in
the long run no government can survive without some measure of
popular support." By taking the people's side, bishops and
priests were following the example of the primitive Church, whose
popular roots allowed it to survive the persecutions, calumnies,
and ideological threats of the Roman Empire and eventually to
absorb its very enemies.
Many churchmen also felt that, given the
model of capitalist development, there was no alternative. Jose
Comblin, the Church's foremost authority on national security,
maintains with considerable statistical support that "development"
as demonstrated in Brazil is "anti-people" and therefore
"anti-Church," because "without people there can
be no Church." Contrary to the claims of its rulers, there
has been very little "trickle-down" from the country's
so called economic miracle, except to the nouveau riche military
caste. According to Sao Paulo's prestigious pro-business daily
O Estado, the military's standards of luxury have reached the
point where the principal status symbol is not a house or a car
but a butler. During the seven-year economic miracle, which collapsed
in 1976, the richest 1 percent of the population increased its
share of the nation's wealth from 11.7 to 17.8 percent. Almost
half the country's 38 million workers earn less than the minimum
monthly wage of $70, according to the government's own statistics.
And for all the razzmatazz about Brazilian nationalism, the economy
is actually more dependent on foreign markets and foreign corporations
than it was when the military took power. The government has run
up a $50 billion foreign debt, the highest in the developing world.
The Brazilian Church, scorning to endorse
such a model of development, is "demanding a fair distribution
of the "nation's wealth." "Why is it that only
a few people can eat well while the majority go to bed hungry?"
the bishops asked in their October 1976 pastoral letter. "Why
is it that some people, including foreigners, are able to amass
millions of acres of land for cattle and the export of meat, while
our poor people are not even allowed to continue cultivating the
tiny piece of land on which they were born and grew up? Why is
it that only a few people have the power of decision? The organized
forces of evil do not want to share anything with the poor and
the humble, who constitute the majority of the people. Only the
great and powerful have rights. The humble are allowed to possess
only what is strictly necessary to survive in order to continue
serving the powerful. To mistreat these poor people is to mistreat
Christ."
That sort of plain speaking is what has
caused the Church so many problems in Latin America "Oppressive
regimes are afraid of a conspiracy against the established order,
and we are questioning that order," said Cardinal Aloisio
Lorscheider, president of both the Brazilian Bishops' Conference
and CELAM. "The rationale of security is not acceptable when
it means destroying human beings. This is the socially critical
and prophetic position that the Church takes in light of the Gospel
and in its fight against sin. We also believe that the [capitalist]
economic system does not take sufficient account of the need for
respect and development of the human being but emphasizes money
and profits instead." According to Lorscheider, many Latin-American
bishops are prepared to act on the Medellin Conclusions, now that
there is "widespread regret" for the Church's historical
role as an ally of the rich. Like other churchmen, he believes
this change is due primarily to external events.
Even the most conservative hierarchies,
including Argentina's bishops, have been forced to protest a reign
of terror that has converted South America into a giant concentration
camp with some thirty thousand political prisoners, and thousands
more murdered or exiled. In previous times of military dictatorship,
there was at least somewhere to hide. Argentines could find safety
in Uruguay; Bolivians and Brazilians could flee to Chile. But
now, when all these countries are marching in step, with a central
pool of computerized data on political exiles and open collaboration
among the region's secret police, repression is standardized and
ubiquitous. Brazilian military officers taught Chile's secret
police the techniques of modern torture in the weeks following
the 1973 coup. Several hundred Chileans and Uruguayans who fled
to Argentina for fear of arrest were murdered by Chilean and Uruguayan
police with the Argentine Government's collaboration. Over fourteen
thousand refugees live in Argentina in daily terror of arrest,
torture, and assassination. They can run no farther because there
is no longer any sanctuary in the neighboring countries. Frequently
it is impossible to obtain a passport and visa to emigrate, not
to mention the cost to these penniless people of passage to the
nearest refuge, in Venezuela. Nor is there any suggestion of immediate
relief. In earlier swings between democracy and dictatorship the
latter rarely lasted longer than a decade, but most of the new
Latin-American military regimes have fortified themselves to stay
in power for several generations, the better to wipe out any vestige
of liberal political traditions.
p56
"The Americans are killing us."
... increasing numbers of churchmen are
denouncing U.S. capitalism and militarism for abetting the repression.
"The Americans are killing us" is a cry repeated throughout
Latin America, often by once-loyal friends of the United States
who were brought up to believe that U.S. democracy is a "shining
beacon for the Free World." Between 1950 and 1975 the United
States trained 71,651 Latin-American military personnel, including
8 of the region's current dictators, and in addition supplied
$2.5 billion worth of armaments. Such collaboration is the lifeblood
of the Doctrine of National Security.
p57
...what is perceived by the Pentagon or the State Department as
'good for the United States" may run exactly counter to the
interests of the Latin-American people. As one former State Department
official concedes, the "word 'communist' has been applied
so liberally and so loosely to revolutionary or radical regimes
that any government risks being so characterized if it adopts
one or more of the following policies that the State Department
finds distasteful: nationalization of private industry, particularly
foreign-owned corporations; radical land reform; autarchic trade
policies; acceptance of Soviet or Chinese aid; insistence upon
following an anti-American or nonaligned foreign ' ~ policy, among
others." Or as theologian Jose Comblin says: "Almost
everything that happens in the rest of the world is somehow made
to appear related to U.S. national security, whether it occurs
in the heart of Africa or in Paraguay or Bolivia. In such a concept,
the American citizen is prompted to feel threatened by economic,
political, and even cultural changes in the rest of the world."
Since there is no serious evidence to
support the claim that Latin America is threatened by an external
enemy, the next-best excuse for spending billions of dollars on
arms is internal "subversion." While few of the guerrilla
groups that emerged in the sixties were a serious menace to established
governments, the phantom of "communist revolution" gave
U.S. governments an excellent pretext to mold the political attitudes
of two generations of military men. These men learned the lessons
so well that they now see communists lurking in every doorway.
Most of the techniques of counterinsurgency, such as intelligence
gathering, police work, propaganda, and the skills to operate
sophisticated equipment, have since been turned against the civilian
population, and long after the last guerrilla has died, the bloodletting
continues. Many of the victims of this repression charge, with
good reason, that the nation that led the fight against fascism
in Europe has contributed to its resurrection in Latin America.
That this could happen is due in large
part to the United States' historically contemptuous attitude
toward Latin America, which it has always looked upon as a purely
business venture. Whereas the atrocities committed by Hitler and
Mussolini outraged the American people, similar repression in
Latin America elicits little more than a yawn. And yet Latin America
supplies many of the United States' strategic materials, is its
second most important trading partner, and is the ethnic root
of 10 percent of its population. So, by default, business dominates
U.S. foreign policy. And business as practiced in Latin America
cannot live with the sort of checks that democracies impose through
the media of a free press, elected Congress, and labor unions.
Were U.S. companies to behave in the United States as they do
in Latin America, with their bribes, double sets of books, tax
evasion, monopolies, and failure to observe even the minimum standards
for consumer protection, many of their executives would be behind
bars. In Latin America such matters are considered standard business
practice. After all these years, foreign companies are still selling
thalidomide in Brazil and dumping DDT in Colombia.
For every dollar that U.S. companies invest
in Latin America, three dollars come back to the United States
in profits, according to the U. S. Department of Commerce. Between
1950 and 1965, this meant a drain on the region's economy of $7.5
billion. Most of this burden has been loaded onto the shoulders
of the poorer classes, and with it has come increasing repression.
In taking up the issue of human rights, therefore, the Catholic
Church necessarily finds itself in opposition to such business
practices; yet every time it dares to question the ethics of the
foreign companies it is immediately accused of "communist
subversion," with the usual threats of repression. But the
more abuse the Church suffers for such criticism, the more critical
it becomes of capitalism's alliance with dictatorships.
Nelson Rockefeller foresaw such a possibility,
though not precisely in these terms. After his 1969 tour of Latin
America on President Nixon's behalf, he warned the U.S. business
community of the anti-imperialist nature of the Medellin documents.
The Rockefeller Report, which became the basis of Nixon's Latin
American policy, also foresaw-indeed, looked forward to-the emergence
of military regimes. Though not specifically stated, the logical
conclusion was that Washington had better keep an eye on the region's
Catholic Church, since it was "vulnerable to subversive penetration."
At least, that was the conclusion reached by the CIA, which had
both used and abused the confidence of U.S. missionaries in the
1960s, and in 1975 concocted a master plan for the persecution
of Church liberals that was adopted by ten Latin-American countries.
Just as the Pentagon encouraged the Latin-American military's
phobias, the CIA used extreme rightwing Catholic organizations
to harass political reformers and outspoken bishops and priests.
Some of the military regimes' most knowledgeable religious inquisitors
were trained by the CIA. They are not only versed in the fine
points of theology but also so well educated in the science of
intelligence that they have files on every nun, priest, and bishop
in the country, including place of birth, education, ideological
convictions, and personal weaknesses. Thus when bishops and priests
criticize U.S. militarism and capitalism, they speak from personal
experience: many of the Latin-American Church's recent martyrs
were killed by people trained and armed by the United States.
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