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The “protector” saint of the Mexican border has a way of popping up

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Larry Peterson - published on 06/22/16

Saint Toribio Romo, martyred during the Cristero War, continues to watch over immigrants

Sometime during the early summer of 1973, Jesús Gaytan and two friends began making their way north to the United States. They were planning to cross the border and find work as farmhands. They didn’t care where, they just wanted, and needed, to work.

At the border their plans quickly unraveled. Jesús became separated from his friends and began wandering around the desert. He had no idea where he was. After several days of walking and wandering and without any food or water left, Jesús was sure he would die.

As he stared across the bleak landscape, peering through the undulating heat waves rising from the ground, he saw a pickup coming his way. Not knowing who was approaching, he became instantly afraid and yet also relieved. The truck pulled up and a young man stepped out. He smiled and gave Jesús food and water. Then he directed him to a nearby farm where they needed workers. He also gave Jesús a few dollars to keep in his pocket. Jesús thanked him profusely and asked him where he could return the money to him.

Speaking perfect Spanish the man said to him, “When you finally get a job and money, look for me in Santa Ana de Guadalupe, Jalisco. Ask for Toribio Romo.”

And so the story goes that years later Gaytan did make a trip to Santa Ana de Guadalupe. When he arrived he asked how he could find Toribio Romo. He was directed to the small church nearby. Hanging on the outside of the chapel was a large picture. Jesús stared at the picture wide-eyed. It was the man from the desert, Toribio Romo.

Jesús had arrived at Toribio’s shrine where his remains are kept. He was shocked to learn that the man who had helped him in the desert 20 years before had been beatified in 1992 by Pope John Paul II. He was doubly shocked that his rescuer had been murdered in 1928 during the Cristero War. Jesús Gaytan realized he had been saved by a man sent from heaven.

Luciano Lopez tells of being on his way to Colorado to find work when he got lost in the heat of the Arizona desert. Luciano tells of seeing a “shadowy” figure standing next to what appeared to be an ocean. Luciano told how the person waved to him and how he began walking. He was led right to a rest-stop with food and water and he was saved. When he told his wife back in Mexico, she said, “It was St. Toribio. I have been praying to him for your well-being.”

Toribio Romo was born on April 16, 1900, in Santa Ana de Guadalupe, Jalisco, Mexico. He was, with permission from the bishop, ordained a priest at the young age of 22. His age did not matter to the authorities. The anti-religious Constitution of Mexico had been enacted in 1917 and Toribio was immediately placed under watch by the government. Then came the fateful year of 1927. That was the year that the president of Mexico, Plutarco Elías Calles, ordered his soldiers to strictly enforce the anti-religious Constitution of 1917.

Besides saying Mass under the radar and making sick calls and hearing confessions, Father Toribio had also been teaching catechism to both children and adults. Now he was told to confine himself to his residence and to not say the Rosary in public or offer Mass. The young priest took up refuge in an old factory near a town called Aguascalientes. Here he defied the secular authority and celebrated Mass and tended to his ministry the best he could.

On February 22, 1928, Father Toribio began organizing his parish registry. He finished on February 24. Father Toribio knew the danger he was in and he was afraid. He prayed daily for God’s grace and strength but would not let his fears stop him from doing his work. It was 4:00 a.m. on February 25 when the young priest climbed into his bed to get some sleep.

An hour later government troops stormed the place and broke into the priest’s bedroom. One soldier shouted, “I have found the priest. Kill him!”

Father Toribio said, “Here I am, but you do not have to kill me.”

One soldier fired and the wounded priest stood up and began to walk toward the soldiers. They opened fire and Father Toribio Romo fell dead. The story of the young priest’s martyrdom spread quickly and his popularity soared.

In 2000, Pope John Paul II canonized Father Toribio and 24 other martyrs murdered for their faith during the Cristero War. Today, Santo Toribio Romo is honored as a patron of immigrants.

Saint Toribio Romo, pray for us.

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