After decades of watching varied gangsters and government officials
prey upon his faithful, this farming city’s Roman Catholic prelate
finally has had enough.
“Michoacan has all the characteristics of a failed state,” declared
Apatzingan Bishop Miguel Patino, describing his western Mexican home
state that’s become the fiefdom of the homicidal Knights Templar gang.
The Knights Templar
and other gangs vie for control of Michoacan “as if it were a pirate’s
bounty,” while “municipal officials and police are either subjugated by
or in collusion with the criminals,” the 75-year-old bishop wrote in a
recent missive.
Mexico’s top clergy long have lamented the “culture of death” that
abets the violence wracking their country. But, because of fear or
favor, they’ve rarely confronted the perpetrators head on.
Now a small but growing number of bishops like Patino has proven
willing to name the tormentors, and even to call out officials aiding
the thugs.
Their activism comes as well-armed militias rise against the gangs
and thousands of federal police and troops pour into Michoacan and
neighboring Guerrero state.
A showdown looms. The bishops appear to be throwing their church and themselves in the middle of it.
“Our families are filling with hate, with rancor, because of what
they are going through,” the Rev. Javier Cortes, second in command of
Apatzingan’s sprawling diocese, told GlobalPost last week. “The bishops’
is a message inviting everyone to join in seeking a solution.”
A tougher stance against organized crime could mark a healthy change
for Mexico’s Catholic Church. The Vatican in the past has reprimanded
the clergy here for accepting drug lords’ donations and has scolded the
country’s Catholic faithful for dabbling in nontraditional cult worship
popularized by the gangs.
Among the more blatant examples of cozy Catholic-narco relations is a
church in the city of Pachuca, northeast of Mexico City, built with
money from Heriberto Lazcano, the late boss of the brutal Zetas cartel.
Last year, the Knights Templar hung welcome signs for the visit of former Pope Benedict, promising to suspend “acts of war” during his stay.
Apatzingan and the surrounding lime- and vegetable-producing valleys
jointly known as the Tierra Caliente, or Hot Land, rank among Mexico’s
deadliest corners. The country’s hyper violence began here seven years
ago when then-President Felipe Calderon deployed troops against the
narcotics syndicate that later spun off into the Knights Templar.
Federal security officers have now reinforced their presence in
Apatzingan and self-defense militias control a half-dozen nearby towns.
That’s brought a veneer of calm. But the Templars’ hold on the city and
many nearby towns is unbroken.
“There is a complete weariness with all of this,” said a government
security analyst in Morelia, the state capital, speaking on condition
his name or position not be used. “The church is the only voice left
with any credibility.”
Earlier this month, Patino led a procession through Apatzingan
demanding peace. He’s appeared in Mexican media complaining about the
Templars’ extortion and other abuses. He recently had the names of
dozens of Apatzingan’s killed or missing placed on the altar of the
city’s cavernous Cathedral of the Assumption.
Amid reports he had received Templar death threats, Patino left
Apatzingan last week escorted by a large contingent of federal police.
Yet the cathedral’s doors stand open throughout the day. The diocese’s offices tucked behind the church remain unguarded.
“We think that they may take revenge,” Cortes said of the Knights
Templar. “There is no security. But they haven’t attacked the church so
far.”
Mexico’s religious leaders wield outsized influence in their
communities. They offer easy targets should they cross the powers that
be.
Gunmen in 1993 pumped 14 bullets at close range into Cardinal Jesus
Posadas, the archbishop of Guadalajara, as he arrived at the city’s
airport to catch a flight.
Officials said his killers had mistaken the robed 67-year-old cleric
for the much younger drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman. But many,
including Posada’s successor in Guadalajara, alleged a plot against the
cardinal by either gangsters, officials or both.
More recently, at least 12 priests and nuns have been murdered
in Mexico in the past six years, by the count of a Vatican news agency.
Though motives have not been established for all the killings, a
handful have been blamed on organized crime.
A village priest from Apatzingan’s diocese who ran afoul of local
gangs was murdered 16 months ago. Another cleric disappeared earlier
this year in a different region of Michoacan where the Knights Templar
have been battling rivals.
Priests elsewhere who run shelters for United States-bound Central
Americans passing through Mexico regularly receive death threats from
gangs that extort the migrants.
Church officials Tuesday confirmed yet another parish priest remains
missing since armed men abducted him after Mass in the northeastern
state of Tamaulipas, a migrant corridor.
Similarly, assassins last week bludgeoned to death a Michoacan mayor
who recently had dared to publicly complain about Templars’ extortion.
“The church should play a role in the issue. But what do you gain by
declarations?” said Alfredo Gallegos, 62, a parish priest from a town
near Morelia. He’s known as “Padre Pistolas,” famous for never going
anywhere without a .45 caliber pistol tucked into his belt.
“We have to
organize people.”
The Mexican Episcopal Conference, which represents the country’s
prelates, has voiced support for Patino. But the conference has
scheduled only an hour long discussion of violence during its annual
gathering this week outside Mexico City.
Senior church leaders “decided to learn the experiences of the
bishops of Michoacan and Guerrero because they are the states where the
violence has gotten worse,” Javier Navarro, bishop of the Michoacan city
of Zamora, who also has complained publicly of government inaction
against the Templars, told a news conference Monday.
Whether Patino’s call will have an impact even in Apatzingan is a
riddle. Though most of the 700,000 people in the region were baptized
Roman Catholic, only 1 in 5 of them attend mass regularly, Cortes said.
Protestant faiths, particularly the Jehovah’s Witnesses, flourish.
Many young people, especially those in the gang life, venerate St. Jude,
the patron of lost causes. Or they worship “Santa Muerte” (Holy Death),
a modern rendition of an ancient Aztec goddess of the underworld.
Members of the Knights Templar, named after Catholic warrior monks
who fought in the Crusades to recapture the Holy Land from Islam in the
Middle Ages, profess a spiritual philosophy that stresses devotion to
the gang and a strict code of conduct.
Michoacan, not God, holds the center of the Templar creed, Cortes said.
“They were all born in the Catholic church, but they aren’t practicing,” he said of the gangsters.
“They’ve created an ideology that they put in people’s heads. It’s like the Holy War of the Muslims.
“You are going to die for Michoacan. You are going to live for Michoacan. Michoacan is everything.’”