A group of young people shouting, “Where are the priests? We’re going
to burn them at the stake,” attacked the Mary Help of Christians
Salesian School in Merida, Spain, leaving one teacher wounded.
According to the Salesian Press Office in Spain, the incident occurred
at 1:20 p.m. local time on Oct. 18, when “some 100 young people entered
the premises of the Mary Help of Christians Salesian School in Merida.”
Nearly 1,000 K-12 students attend the school.
“Custodial workers and some teachers at the school tried to stop the
group, but 10 of them were able to gain entrance to the school building,
shouting insults against the institution, pushing staff members who
were in their way and attempting to disrupt the normal school day,” the
Salesians said.
Principal Marco Antonio Romero told the newspaper El Mundo that the
young people’s intention was to pull down the crucifixes. “More public
education and less crucifixes,” they shouted.
The attackers carried flags from the Spanish Civil War, shouted insults
at the teachers and professors and tried to steal several laptop
computers from classrooms, the newspaper reported.
The red, yellow and dark purple flags were the same ones used by the
Republican faction, left-wing radicals and anarchists during Spain’s
bloody, anti-clerical conflict that led to the deaths of thousands of
priest, seminarians, religious and laypeople between 1936 and 1939.
During the attack on the school, one teacher suffered minor wounds
while trying to keep the young people from entering her classroom.
The Salesians said steps will be taken to prevent any kind of such
attacks in the future and that they will be filing a lawsuit against the
assailants. “This kind of conduct cannot be allowed in a constitutional
state.”