312:(Triple A). The resulting return of revenge killings between the Triple A against the left and the violence that resulted (the Montoneros' violence being more strategic, such as bombing buildings of transnational corporations funding the AAA and Right-wing violence) led Mugica to leave his government post, as well as to break with the Montoneros, by December 1973. He became the subject of increasingly heated political debate, and numerous unauthorized compilations of his works appeared – with each arranging his prolific past articles in the order most amenable to their agenda. Mugica's repudiation of these did little to deter the practice, and he accepted
297:, which he refused. Peronists won the 1973 election handily, and though Cámpora took office on May 25, Perón was the new government's principal figure. His ongoing manipulation of both the left and the right in his movement was illustrated by his allowing Cámpora to name Father Mugica as an unpaid, senior consultant to the powerful Minister of Social Welfare – a post Perón filled with his personal secretary and leading
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neighborhood. His continued activism as a Third World Priest earned Bishop
Armaburu's growing opposition, however, and in 1970, the Bishop banned the organization in the archdiocese. These differences reached a flash point when a fellow JEC priest, Father Alberto Carbone, was detained on charges of
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Mugica's growing involvement in politics led to his replacement at the
Mallinkrodt school, whereby he obtained an appointment in the slum's new "Christ the Worker" Chapel, as well as Cardinal Caggiano's ordainment for the post. Continuing to teach university classes, he also served as vicar to the
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He defied orders by presiding over the
September 1970 funerals of a number of executed Montoneros figures, which led to his suspension for 30 days by Bishop Aramburu. Following the suspension, Aramburu began actively pressing Mugica to renounce his vows, and he began taking increasingly intricate
126:. Cardinal Caggiano assigned his new vicar to a number of both Catholic and secular institutions, including the University of Buenos Aires, where he sponsored a 1965 symposium, "Dialogue between Catholics and Marxists." He taught as Professor of Theology, Child Psychology and Law in the prominent
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organization in 1968, and Mugica took some distance from these individuals, though he stopped short of breaking with them entirely. He was increasingly at odds with conservatives both in the
University of Buenos Aires faculty (notably executive and Agricultural Law Professor
59:), and his mother was Carmen Echagüe – herself born to one of Argentina's premier landowners. Mugica was the only one of seven siblings to have completed both his primary and secondary education in secular schools, and he graduated from the prestigious public
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Nothing nor anyone will impede me from serving Christ and his Church by fighting alongside the poor for their liberation. If the Lord shall grant me the privilege – which I don't deserve – of losing my life in this endeavor, I shall be at His
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His sermons at the Christ the Worker Chapel enjoyed growing popularity, and were often visited by politicians, football players and other celebrities. The chapel received an impromptu visit on
December 6, 1972, by
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in April. He then returned to Buenos Aires, where he resumed his daily schedule of services. Following
Saturday morning services on May 11 at the San Francisco Solano Parish,
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386:"El Padre Carlos Mugica y su Misa para el Tercer Mundo, un disco secuestrado por la dictadura militar argentina antes de su distribución. | audio.urcm.net"
293:, a left-leaning dentist and longtime advisor to Perón whom the aging leader made the party's nominee; Cámpora offered Mugica a candidacy for a seat in
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pistol into Father Mugica; he did not immediately die from his wounds and was rushed to a nearby hospital, where his last words were to a nurse:
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district apartment building; but on July 2, 1971, a bomb exploded at the address. He then divided his time between the port-area slum and
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Mugica became a regular guest at the leftist Young
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López Rega used the important cabinet position (and its control of 30% of the national budget) to organize and arm his
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home. Perón, who at the time was occupied with cultivating alliances with the far left in
Argentina, spent ten days in
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steps to conceal his whereabouts at night. Mugica improvised makeshift quarters at his parents'
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in 1949 and was accepted into its law school; but in 1952, following a year in
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magazine from 1957 and in 1959, was ordained as a priest by the local
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area. He contributed articles and commentary to the ecclesiastical
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town well known for being the birthplace of former first lady
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114:(one of Argentina's least developed), and was then appointed
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with Father Mugica who, on his return to Paris, joined the
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complicity in the
Montoneros' murder of former President
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55:(opponents of suffrage activist and populist President
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Ahora más que nunca tenemos que estar junto al pueblo
86:Seminary and in 1954 was assigned to the Parish of
30:(October 7, 1930 – May 11, 1974) was an Argentine
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354:Now more than ever, we must be with the people.
452:20th-century Argentine Roman Catholic priests
410:"CARLOS MUGICA - ANIVERSARIO de su MARTIRIO"
336:by Bishop Aramburu, he retreated briefly to
16:Argentine Roman Catholic priest and activist
47:Carlos Francisco Sergio Mugica was born in
168:for the sake of recovering revolutionary
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358:The assassination is depicted the 2019
202:Movement of Priests for the Third World
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212:Parish in Buenos Aires' working-class
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110:He spent most of 1960 in a parish in
289:, Mugica was perhaps closest to Dr.
268:Distancing from the Clergy and Perón
118:for the Archbishop of Buenos Aires,
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457:Argentine people of Basque descent
348:(AAA), discharged five shots of a
235:Monasterio Benedictino Santa María
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467:Argentine anti-poverty advocates
346:Argentine Anticommunist Alliance
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65:Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires
487:Deaths by firearm in Argentina
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138:adjacent to the city's port.
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482:People murdered in Argentina
154:José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz
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184:in support of the historic
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72:University of Buenos Aires
61:college preparatory school
53:National Democratic Party
447:Clergy from Buenos Aires
324:in early 1975, however.
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477:Assassinated activists
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160:(particularly Bishop
100:Roman Catholic Church
34:priest and activist.
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210:San Francisco Solano
176:A Third World priest
162:Juan Carlos Aramburu
23:Father Carlos Mugica
156:) and in the local
287:Justicialist Party
283:upcoming elections
223:State Intelligence
88:Saint Rose of Lima
82:. He entered the
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170:Che Guevara
158:archdiocese
431:Categories
395:2016-01-13
372:References
338:Los Toldos
334:defrocking
314:RCA Victor
275:Juan Perón
246:Los Toldos
214:Villa Luro
190:Juan Perón
148:Montoneros
80:priesthood
43:Early life
299:far-right
281:ahead of
262:disposal.
254:Eva Perón
242:monastery
192:, in his
96:Seminario
295:Congress
231:Recoleta
132:chaplain
124:Caggiano
122:Cardinal
120:Antonio
301:voice,
166:Bolivia
350:Mac-10
250:pampas
194:Madrid
76:Europe
63:, the
362:film
360:drama
182:Paris
116:vicar
198:Cuba
136:slum
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