Milton Public Library

Compañeros, two communities in a transnational communion, Joe Gatlin, Nancy Gatlin, and Joel H. Scott

Label
Compañeros, two communities in a transnational communion, Joe Gatlin, Nancy Gatlin, and Joel H. Scott
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Compañeros
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Joe Gatlin, Nancy Gatlin, and Joel H. Scott
Sub title
two communities in a transnational communion
Summary
On a Thursday morning in 1981, four thousand campesinos (fieldworkers), fleeing a US-funded Salvadoran death squad, stumbled down the rocky, overgrown side of a hill to the Lempa River. Some were mown down by machine guns and the strafing of helicopters; others drowned as they were swept away by the river. The rest escaped to live the next eight years in UN refugee camps in Honduras. In 1989 many of these refugees returned to El Salvador as the repatriated community of Valle Nuevo. Companeros tells the stories of a twenty-five year relationship of accompaniment, healing, and forgiveness between Valle Nuevo and a small association of churches in the United States, Shalom Mission Communities. The two groups have come to embrace a transnational communion with one another despite the economic, political, and spiritual chasms that exist today. This work is a collective, collaborative effort of storytelling and theological reflection, interweaving oral and written accounts of suffering, thanksgiving, sharing, remembering, and proclaiming the death of Christ until he comes again
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content

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