TORONTO — It may be 30 years since Cardinal Michael Czerny left the Jesuit-run Central American University in El Salvador, but it’s not a place that has forgotten him.

Canada’s newest cardinal was on the scene in San Salvador shortly after the coldblooded murder of six Jesuits Nov. 16, 1989. The massacre of the priests, plus their housekeeper and her teenage daughter, at their university residence came during El Salvador’s brutal 12-year civil war.

Despite the lingering dangers, then-Father Czerny, a Jesuit, assumed the director’s role of the school’s Human Rights Institute, a position that was held by one of the murdered priests, Father Segundo Montes.

“He assumed the defense of those rights with courage at the end of the civil war,” said Jesuit Father Rodolfo Cardenal in an email to The Catholic Register.

Such courage continued to show as Czerny — born in Czechoslovakia and educated and ordained in Canada — played an important role in the trial of the government soldiers responsible for the murders.

“Thanks to his contacts in the international community, a distinguished group of personalities attended the trial and then testified to the procedural fraud that had been committed,” said Cardenal, a professor of theology at the university.

But just as Czerny, 73, has not been forgotten by the university, he in turn has not forgotten the school. Cardenal, also director of the Archbishop Romero Center at the school, said each Nov. 16, Czerny has sent a message to the school, known as UCA in El Salvador, from wherever he has been posted around the world.

“The link has not been broken. For the UCA and for himself, his passage here has left an indelible mark,” Cardenal said.

It’s a refrain heard from wherever Czerny has laid his hat in a priestly career dedicated to looking out for the marginalized in society.

Jesuit Father Elphege Quenum describes the time he spent with Czerny at the African Jesuit AIDS Network in Nairobi, Kenya, as “two rich years.” It was September 2003 and Quenum had just completed his master’s degree in social sciences and was beginning his Jesuit regency with the future cardinal.

“I discovered a companion who was very dedicated to the cause of the poor and the vulnerable people,” said Quenum, who now directs the program.

He saw a man “who did not spare a single energy” to develop answers for the good of the people with HIV or AIDS in Africa.

“He used to say, ‘This is the time for the Church. We are called, in this moment, to express the Church’s closeness to the weak and people who are suffering in society,'” Quenum said.

Msgr. Robert Vitillo has seen that sense of urgency in Czerny during the 20-plus years he has known and worked with him. He also sees humility in the man and does not think being made cardinal will change him.

“I do not think Cardinal Czerny considers it an elevation,” said Vitillo, secretary-general of the Geneva-based International Catholic Migration Commission. “In his message to friends and family, he clarifies that this is a call by the Holy Father to greater service and sacrifice for the Church.”

Vitillo said he believes that Pope Francis’s calling of his fellow Jesuit to the College of Cardinals should be a challenge “to keep in mind the people on the peripheries of the world and to make them as the center of our lives of service.”

“I believe that Cardinal Czerny’s call to greater and more selfless service will indeed bring more attention to the work we do,” he said. “I have no doubt that his voice as a cardinal will be heard more acutely and widely, both in the corridors of power and in the hearts of the people forced to leave their homes and local communities and those who serve them.”

– – –

Conlon writes for The Catholic Register, Toronto.


Crux is dedicated to smart, wired and independent reporting on the Vatican and worldwide Catholic Church. That kind of reporting doesn’t come cheap, and we need your support. You can help Crux by giving a small amount monthly, or with a onetime gift. Please remember, Crux is a for-profit organization, so contributions are not tax-deductible.