OKLAHOMA CITY — Wearing a red and black traditional Guatemalan shirt that belonged to Blessed Fr. Stanley Rother, Ronald Arteaga traveled from his village of Santiago Atítaln to witness the Sept. 23 beatification of the pastor he knew as “Padre A’Plas.”

Ronald Arteaga was 10 when Padre A’plas, his pastor, also known as Fr. Stanley Rother, was martyred. He’s wearing the priest’s shirt. (Tony Gutierrez/CATHOLIC SUN)

Even though Arteaga was only 10 when Fr. Rother was martyred, he remembers “he was always with the people of Santiago Atitlan, and more than that, he identified with our indigenous population.”

The sleeves on Arteaga’s shirt had to be rolled up because, as he recalled, Fr. Rother was a tall man.

“He learned to speak Tz’utujil, the language of my people, and he always served the people most in need,” Arteaga said.

When Fr. Rother was killed, Arteaga recalled, it “broke the hearts of the entire village,” but “we had hope that he would receive this honor and thanks be to God that this day has arrived!”

Related stories

‘They killed a man but created a saint,’ prelate says of slain priest

Blessed Rother ‘an authentic light’ for church and world, says cardinal

An estimated 20,000 packed the Cox Convention Center from across the country and throughout the world to witness the beatification of the native Oklahoman who would become the first U.S.-born martyr.

“We’re amazed at the size of the crowd and delighted so many people are interested in celebrating his life,” said Archbishop Paul S. Coakley during a media availability. “He’s a local hero whose reputation goes far beyond Oklahoma.”

Fr. Don Wolf is a cousin of Blessed Stanley Roteher. (Tony Gutierrez/CATHOLIC SUN)

Fr. Don Wolf, a cousin of Fr. Rother, made an appeal for continued support of the martyr’s missions in Santiago Atitlan and Cerro de Oro.

“For the people of his parish in Santiago Atitlan and Cerro de Oro and all of us here in Oklahoma, he has led our eyes unwaveringly to the Kingdom of God,” Fr. Wolf said.

It was for Fr. Wolf’s ordination in May 1981 that Fr. Rother made his last visit to the United States, a distinction that Fr. Wolf reflected links his priesthood to his martyred cousin’s.

“At ordination they invoke the saints … at my ordination we had one,” Fr. Wolf said. “It’s an enormous inspiration and an enormous challenge — the kind of service his priesthood embodied is the kind of service that I strive to.”

Francisco “Chico” Chavajay, program coordinator for Unbound Project in Guatemala, was only 1 when Fr. Rother was killed, but grew up in San Pedro, which is near Santiago Atitlan, knowing who Fr. A’Plas was and the impact he had on the community.

“My family benefited from the hospital he founded because one of my sisters went to the hospital when I was 8 years old, and we didn’t have access to a closer hospital,” Chavajay recalled. “If it wasn’t for his work, it would probably have been a different story for my sister.”*

Chavajay now works for Unbound, an organization founded in 1981 by five lay Catholics, including one who’d worked with Fr. Rother in Guatemala. Unbound works with children and the elderly in poor and marginalized communities throughout the world. In Guatemala, Chavajay is responsible for serving more than 60,000 families.

A reliquary holding a relic of Blessed Stanley Rother is seen during his beatification Mass Sept. 23 at Oklahoma City’s Cox Convention Center. Blessed Rother, a priest of the Oklahoma City Archdiocese, was murdered in 1981 in the Guatemalan village where he ministered. (CNS photo/Steve Sisney, Archdiocese of Oklahoma City)

“For us, he’s like an angel we have in heaven to support this cause,” Chavajay said. “We feel that A’Plas’ hand and prayers in heaven are helping guide us in this life to continue bringing the Gospel and salvation to our brothers and sisters in need.”*

Seminarians Estevan Wetzel and Ian Wintering from the Diocese of Phoenix traveled to the ordination with a group of fellow seminarians attending St. John Vianney Seminary in Denver. They were introduced to Fr. Rother’s story through their Oklahoma brothers.

“His ordinary ‘yes’s’ came with a great faith that at the end allowed him to receive a martyr’s crown,” Wetzel said.

Estevean Wetzel and Ian Wintering, seminarians for the Diocese of Phoenix, reported on the beatification for St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. (Tony Gutierrez/CATHOLIC SUN)

Seminarians from Phoenix typically complete their Spanish immersion program in Antigua, Guatemala, which is near the Santiago Atitlan mission. Wintering hopes to visit Blessed Rother’s shrine when he studies there next summer. He said he pulls inspiration from Fr. Rother’s “humility and simplicity.”

“I know how broken I am, and how humble he was,” Wintering reflected. “I seek his intercession because being a ‘nobody’ priest, he rose to glory by following God’s will, and I hope to do that in my own nothingness.”

Sr. Gabina Colo, local superior of the Missionary Sisters of the Eucharist* in Houston brought her community for the beatification.

“He was a missionary in Guatemala — he gave his whole life to the people of Guatemala,” Sr. Gabina said. “Since we’re from Guatemala, it encourages us to be missionaries here in the United States, so we can follow his example.”

Fr. Guillermo Treviño traveled from the Diocese of Davenport, Iowa, for the beatification. Serving in an area that relies heavily on agriculture, Fr. Treviño was impressed at Fr. Rother’s “ordinariness.”

“The thing is he was so ordinary, but he had great gifts. In Guatemala he’d be working the farm,” reflected Fr. Treviño, finding inspiration in his example. “That line — “The Shepherd cannot run” — can I do this?

Siblings of Blessed Stanley Rother, Tom Rother and Sister Marita Rother, who is a member of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ, attend the beatification Mass for their brother Sept. 23 at Oklahoma City’s Cox Convention Center. Blessed Rother, a priest of the Oklahoma City Archdiocese, was murdered in 1981 in the Guatemalan village where he ministered. (CNS photo/Steve Sisney, Archdiocese of Oklahoma City)

Dolores Mendoza Cervantes knew Fr. A’Plas in Santiago Atitlan. Her father, Juan Mendoza Lacán, helped him to translate the Bible into Tz’utujil, and was himself killed less than a year later on June 22, 1982. Dolores came to the U.S. at 16 because she had threats on her own life, but pointed out as a result of their efforts, “all the newer generations can read the language.”

She now lives in Danube, California with her husband, Robert Cervantes. They said the government at the time considered teaching the Tz’utujil to read a threat.

“Fr. Stanley and my father-in-law were brave enough to stand up to them,” Robert said. “They knew they were going to be killed someday, but that didn’t stop them from translating the Bible into Tz’utujil.”

Further reading

Arizona Catholics look forward to beatification

‘An ordinary Martyr’ video