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| Spanish bishop Pedro Casaldaliga, shown here speaking to actor Eduard Fernandes in an undated photo released by Minoria Absoluta Productions, has died aged 92 in Brazil |
The Spanish bishop Pedro Casaldaliga, a fervent defender of the indigenous people of the Amazon, died Saturday at the age of 92 in Brazil, where he had been living since 1968, his office said.
The Prelature of Sao Felix do Araguaia, in the
central-western state of Mato Grosso, where Casaldaliga was bishop emeritus,
announced in a statement that he passed away in the morning at hospital in
Batatais, near Sao Paulo.
He had been in intensive care due to respiratory
problems and was suffering from Parkinson's disease.
"Our land, our people are losing today an example
of generous living for a better world; we will miss him very much," former
left-wing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva tweeted.
Born in 1928 in Balsareny, Catalonia, and ordained a
priest in 1952, he went on mission to Sao Felix do Araguaia, in the heart of
the Brazilian Amazon, in 1968, while the country was under a military
dictatorship.
He opposed the regime, the wealthy landowning class,
and even the Vatican, defending the landless peasants and the indigenous
people.
"In this land, it is easy to be born and die, but
difficult to live," the prelate told AFP in 2012, as a TV series about his
life was released -- "Barefoot on Red Soil," from the book of the
same name by Catalan writer Francesc Escribano.
Living under the constant threat of hired killers in
the pay of large landowners, he was one of the founders of the Pastoral Land
Commission (CPT) and the Indigenous Missionary Council (CIMI), two key bodies
in the struggle for agrarian reform.
In 1998 Bishop Casaldaliga was called to Rome, where
he underwent a tough interrogation by the then Prefect of the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who seven years later
became Pope Benedict XVI.
At the end of last month, he and 150 other Brazilian
bishops signed an open letter criticizing the extreme right-wing president Jair
Bolsonaro, castigating his "incompetence" and his
"inability" to manage the coronavirus health crisis, which has caused
nearly 100,000 deaths in Brazil -- including several hundred indigenous people.

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