Tanenbaum Center for Intrreligious Understanding
  
 
“Because of [my] ministry, I was kidnapped…, tortured, and beaten almost to death."
 

stay in touch

 
 Keep up with all the latest news and events. 
 

sign up now! 

 

José "Chencho" Alas, El Salvador

José Inocencio Alas is a community organizer and former Catholic priest who lives in
El Salvador.  Today, he works openly to transform problems of violence, poverty, and hunger in his native country.  But he hasn’t always had this luxury. For years, he operated under constant harassment, in full knowledge that his nonviolent activism could get him killed.

“Chencho,” as he is affectionately known, began his career by promoting education
and land reform for the peasants in his parish.  As his nonviolent activism gained support in the countryside, he became unpopular among landowners who feared his influence. In January 1970, while attending a land reform conference, Chencho was abducted, beaten, and drugged, before being thrown out of a moving car. This was
not the last time he would be targeted. In 1976, after bombings to his house and multiple unwarranted arrests, he was forced to flee the country to preserve his life.

In the face of this hardship, Alas continued his work, turning to faith to give him strength. When he returned to El Salvador, he helped establish the Foundation for Self-Sufficiency in Central America, which today supports a wide variety of programs for low-income communities. In his view, only by simultaneously addressing the problems of poverty, violence, education and spiritual development can the country achieve lasting reconciliation. To this end, Chencho also launched an ambitious initiative to declare El Salvador’s Lower Lempa region a “Zone of Peace” – an area committed to changing the culture of violence to one of collaboration, mutual problem solving, and peace.

Today, Chencho Alas’s tireless work continues. Although he is no longer in the priesthood, he is still known as “Father” to his constituents, and religion continues to drive and define his work.  


back to top

return to all peacemaker awardees

 


© 2008, Tanenbaum Center for Interreligious Understanding.  Read our privacy policy and terms of use .
If you're having trouble viewing this site, please contact us at web at tanenbaum dot org.


Web Development by Webdrafter.com, Inc