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Ashley McKinlessMay 21, 2015
People carry portraits of Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero during rally in his honor in San Salvador.

On Saturday, May 23, the martyred Archbishop Oscar Romero will be beatified, 35 years after he was assassinated while celebrating Mass in the modest chapel of Divine Providence Hospital in San Salvador. Columnist James Keane is in San Salvador and will be reporting from the ceremony for America. Check this page for ongoing coverage and dive into our collection of articles, videos, podcasts and more on the archbishop who lived and died giving voice to the poor and preaching a message of liberation to oppressed and oppressor alike.

The Ignatian Solidarity Network will be live-streaming the beatification ceremony here, at 12 p.m. ET.

Updates from San Salvador

Yours, Francisco
A letter from Pope Francis

Relics of the future
Tears from some hard characters.

Early Morning, San Salvador
With three hours still to go until the Mass of celebration for the beatification of Oscar Romero, the Plaza El Salvador del Mundo and the surrounding streets are filled with people, 

En La Mañana
While the beatification ceremony for Oscar Romero will be held today in Plaza El Salvador del Mundo in San Salvador, many pilgrims are also visiting La Capilla del Hospital Divina Providencia.

Oscar Romero's Books (5/22)

A Holy Mess: In San Salvador with Blessed Oscar Romero (5/22)

Resources for Romero (5/20)

The countdown to Oscar Romero's beatification begins (5/18)

Analysis

A Prayer for El Salvador, James T. Keane (5/4)
Romero had as many enemies in death as in life, but we will not be hearing much from them. Everyone these days—even those who hindered his cause for sainthood on the grounds he was a Marxist...has nothing but love for Oscar Romero

Martyrdom Revisited, The Editors (4/13)
Óscar Romero was killed out of hatred of the faith, dying a martyr’s death—not because he was shot through the heart while saying Mass, but because he dared to make real the Gospel demands for dignity and justice on behalf of the defenseless and marginalized in El Salvador.
 
Death Comes For the Archbishop, Kevin Clarke (3/23)
He was wrapping up yet another memorable homily for those gathered in the church and those who would listen to his words later on the radio. “The harvest comes about,” he said, “only because it dies, allowing itself to be sacrificed in the earth and destroyed. Only by undoing itself does it produce the harvest.
 
The Theological Commission of the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints concluded that Romero's words and actions in favor of the poor and for justice were motivated by his faith, and not by political reasons.
 
This past summer I traveled to El Salvador as part of a delegation to mark the 25th anniversary of these assassinations, and I saw some of the many ways the country continues to suffer from the bitter fruits of war. 
 
In the Steps of Romero, Thomas P. Rausch (10/10/14)
Sitting a few feet from the great bronze sculpture of the four evangelists lifting up the murdered archbishop, I read on the red marble slab over Archbishop Óscar Romero’s tomb the phrase Sentir con la Iglesia, generally translated as “To think with the church.”
 
Salvador's Saint, Richard Amesbury and Andrew Kirschman (4/26/10)
 “Romero matters regardless of the generation,” says Ana Grande, 30, a second-generation Salvadoran-American who is a community organizer in Los Angeles. “For the younger generation, although they didn’t have firsthand contact, it is a remembrance of faith and justice. 
 
A Report from Romero's Funeral, James L. Connor, S.J. (4/26/1980)
All went peacefully through a succession of prayers, readings, hymns until the moment in his homily when Cardinal Ernesto Corripio Ahumada of Mexico, the personal delegate of Pope John Paul II, began to praise Archbishop Romero as a man of peace and a foe of violence. Suddenly, a bomb exploded at the far edge of the plaza.
 

Video

Romero Beatification Report

America Media is in San Salvador, covering the beatification of Oscar Romero. Here's our report from the Hospital Divina Providencia, the chapel where Romero was martyred while celebrating mass on March 24, 1980.

Kevin Clarke reflects on the archbishop's ministry and how it was grounded in the Beatitudes.
 
Pilgrims travel to El Salvador to experience the beatification of martyred Archbishop Oscar Romero and to better understand the man and his people.
 
Priests in El Salvador prepare for the beatification of martyred Archbishop Oscar Romero and talk about what this step in the canonization process means to them.
 
The soon-to-be beatified Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero is remembered on the 35th anniversary of his assassination.
 
Salvadorans celebrate news that Archbishop Oscar Romero, assassinated in 1980 while celebrating Mass in a hospital chapel, has been declared a martyr for the faith.
 

Podcast

Chief correspondent Kevin Clarke, author of Love Must Win Out, a new biography of Oscar Romero from Liturgical Press, talks about the news that Archbishop Romero has been officially named a martyr by a Vatican commission. 
 

Photos  

Pictures from the life of Archbishop Oscar Romero and from the city and people that he loved.
 
Luke Hansen, S.J., took part in delegation to El Salvador from July 24 to Aug. 1, 2014, to mark the 25th anniversary of the assassination of six Jesuit priests, Elba Ramos and her daughter Celina at the University of Central America.
 

'America' in El Salvador, 1977–90

A Witness to Justice, Edmundo Moran (May 7, 1977)

El Salvador's Climate of Terror, Edmundo Moran (Feb. 18, 1978)

A Pilgrimage to Aguilares, James R. Brockman, S.J. (Sept. 2, 1978)

Persecution of El Salvador, James R. Brockman, S.J. (Feb. 10, 1979)

Of Many Things, Joseph A. O'Hare, S.J. (April 5, 1980)

Archbishop Romero, the United States and El Salvador, James Brockman, S.J. (March 24, 1990)

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