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2022-06-23 17:11:08 By :

Father Javier Ávila claimed to have been speechless when he learned that the death of his fellow Jesuit priests in Chihuahua was "because of baseball."According to information from the authorities, the murders were the consequence of a baseball game that the team sponsored by “el Chueco” lost.Father Javier Ávila, who has been in the Tarahumara mountains for 48 years, specifically in Creel, 2 hours from Cerocahui, where the events occurred, assured that no death makes sense.He assured for him that the things that the lawsuits that occur, not only in the mountains, but in many parts of the country, often have absurd origins.But knowing that what led to the murder of his companions, the Jesuit priestsit was for a baseball game, it leaves him speechless.“The lawsuits that sometimes arise in the mountains and in many parts of Mexico sometimes have absurd origins…no death makes sense, deaths are absurd, what you say (is that it was) for a baseball game, I leaves speechless”Likewise, he said he was not aware of what is said about the causes that led the tourist guide, Pedro Palma, to die, but he assured that no death makes sense and described them as absurd.The Chihuahua prosecutor's office shared days before the murders, the baseball team sponsored by "el Chueco" lost what started a lawsuit.Then, the criminal searched for and kidnapped two members of the opposing team, Paul "N" and Armando "N" and then set their house on fire.Later, Pedro Palma met at a hotel in Cerocahui where he was kidnapped and beaten on several occasions.Although he was polyconcussion, he escaped and reached the temple where he called for help.However, “El Chueco” caught up with him and murdered the Jesuit priests and Palma.The priest Javier “Pato” Ávila shared that a provincial father of the Jesuits went to the Western Prosecutor's Office of Chihuahua to identify the bodies of the Jesuit priests.With the certainty that it is his body, the community will meet today, June 23 in Creel to decide what celebrations will be held for his companions and where.Likewise, he assured that the Jesuit priests will never die and the community will remain despite the death of their companions.“We buried the bodies, we did not bury Javier and Joaquín, we buried their bodies.Because I am convinced that a man dies when he stops being named, and Javier and Joaquín will never stop being named”In this sense, he also said that the Jesuits will remain in the Tarahumara mountains to continue the work they have been doing for hundreds of years.