Skip to content

Border Blogs & News

Blogs and news from the borders of America.

Menu
  • Home
  • El Paso News
  • El Paso Herald Post
  • Fronterizo News
Menu

Border Report – Peace must be a priority, say Catholic leaders on anniversary of priests’ violent deaths in Mexico

Posted on June 20, 2024

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Two years have passed since a leader of one of Mexico’s organized crime gangs stormed into a Catholic church in the remote Tarahumara mountains and fatally shot two Jesuit priests.

Among many faith leaders nationwide, the pain unleashed on June 20, 2022 — when the Revs. Javier Campos Morales, 79, and Joaquín César Mora Salazar, 80, were murdered by a local gang leader — has not faded. Nor their quest for peace.


Still hurting from violence, Mexican priests and families hope for peace ahead of elections

“The murders of Fathers Javier and Joaquín has allowed us to redefine the pain that lives in the hearts of many corners of the country,” the Catholic bishops conference of Mexico said in a news release Thursday. “To build a shared movement that has peace as its horizon and the victims of violence as its starting point.”

Jesuit priests Javier Campos Morales, left, and Joaquin Cesar Mora Salazar.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, since he took office in 2018, has avoided direct confrontation with cartels and violent gangs controlling and terrorizing local communities. His “hugs, not bullets” policy has drawn extensive criticism from faith leaders, human rights organizations and journalists who have echoed victims’ fears and anger.


Mexican cartel violence likely to increase in 2024, experts say

Organized crime has long controlled swaths of territory in states such as Guerrero, Guanajuato and Michoacan. Many people have been displaced from rural villages in Chiapas by warring cartels.

Some two dozen candidates were killed ahead of June 2 elections, when Mexicans elected Claudia Sheinbaum as their first female president.


Presidential election bodes rocky road for US-Mexico relations

Both Sheinbaum and López Obrador have rejected any criticism of the government’s security strategies, claiming that homicide levels were reduced during the last administration. In contrast, church leaders have repeatedly said that Mexico suffers from a “deep crisis of violence and social decomposition.”

In remembrance of the 2022 murders, the bishops conference, Jesuits of Mexico and some other national religious organizations announced Thursday a third stage of the “National Peace Dialogue.” They demanded concrete actions to address nationwide violence.


Cartels snub cease-fire request from Catholic bishops, slaughter 17, per reports

For the past two years, the initiative has brought together civil society, academics, violence victims and businesspeople who search for solutions to achieve justice, security and peace. More than 60,000 testimonies have been gathered.

The relationship between López Obrador and the Catholic Church has been tense ever since the murder of the Jesuits priests. Bishop Ramón Castro, secretary general of the bishops conference, said ahead of June elections that he wished for a deeper dialogue between the government and the church.


Slain priest shared concerns about poverty, drugs in mountains of Chihuahua

Lopez Obrador has said that religious leaders are “cynical” and “hypocrites” for criticizing him but not his predecessors.

“It’s a shame that the President ignores history,” the Rev. Javier Ávila, a Jesuit who worked close to the murdered priests in the Sierra Tarahumara, said in a recent interview. “So I need to remind him that we, the Jesuits, were expelled from America for having shouted in favor of the Indigenous people.”

“One cannot be indifferent when one has hit rock bottom, when blood has splashed on you, when you have shared tears.”

In its news release Thursday, the bishops’ conference announced the start of the “Local Peace Projects,” which will include various actions in schools, neighborhoods, companies and family environments.

The peace proposal from the Catholic Church addresses seven topics: reconstruction of the social fabric, security, justice, prisons, youth, governance and human rights.

____

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

 Read: Read More 

Recent Posts

  • Tech Crunch – General Catalyst commits $5B to India over five years
  • KTSM News – El Paso pigeon trappers face accusations of animal cruelty
  • Tech Crunch – Ali Partovi’s Neo looks to upend the accelerator model with low-dilution terms
  • KTSM News – Horizon Fire crews deployed to aid in Texas Panhandle wildfires
  • Border Report – Private investigator believes cartel abducted Nancy Guthrie, but didn’t take her to Mexico

El Paso News

El Paso News delivers independent news and analysis about politics and public policy in El Paso, Texas. Go to El Paso News

Politico Campaigns

Are you a candidate running for office? Politico Campaigns is the go-to for all your campaign branding and technology needs.

Go to Politico Campaigns

Custom Digital Art

My name is Martín Paredes and I create custom, Latino-centric digital art. If you need custom artwork for your marketing, I'm the person to call. Check out my portfolio

©2026 Border Blogs & News | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme