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Oscar Romero's Legacy
featuring past award
recipients
The Oscar Romero Award was established in
response to the turbulent and violent times of the 1980s in South and
Central America, especially El Salvador and Guatemala, when unthinkable acts
of terror, torture, and deaths dominated the news. These horrific acts
continue—have even increased—as today more than 150 governments are engaged
in torture. To show how his legacy lives on, two former recipients will speak about how receiving the Oscar Romero Award has touched their lives and guided their activities. Bishop Medardo Gomez received the Oscar Romero Award in 1990 and Sr. Dianna Ortiz in 2004. Bishop Medardo Gomez is the Lutheran Bishop of El Salvador. His life has been threatened numerous times and Resurrection Lutheran Church has been bombed three times. Still, Bishop Gomez believes that the church’s mission includes political involvement, and that bishops often have to speak out and act in ways that are critical of the government—even though such actions are punishable by death in El Salvador. Ursuline Sr. Dianna Ortiz is a U.S.-born survivor of torture in Guatemala. She believes that the man who supervised her torture by Guatemalans is a U.S. citizen, but that his identity will never be revealed because of the likelihood of implicating U.S. officials. Sr. Ortiz is the Executive Director of Torture Abolition and Survivors Coalition International, the only organization founded by torture survivors, whose mission is to abolish torture wherever it occurs. Seating is limited and is available on a
first-come, first-served basis. |
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(c) 2004 Rothko Chapel. All Rights Reserved. |
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