Underneath a rainbow halo ringing the sun, Cardinal Angelo Amato, the prefect of the Vatican's saint-making office, called on the crowd of some 260,000-plus to rejoice in a "feast of peace, fraternity and forgiveness."
"Romero's spirit remains alive and gives comfort to the marginalized people of the world," Cardinal Amato said. "His preference for the poor was not ideological, but evangelical. His charity extended to his persecutors."
Beatification is the first step toward possible canonization, although many of those who packed the Salvadoran capital's Savior of the World Plaza and the surrounding streets already credit Romero with miracles and refer to him as "Saint Romero of the Americas.
"They can kill the prophet, but not the voice of justice," intoned pilgrims from the Our Lady of the Assumption parish in a San Salvador suburb.
"His words will remain for eternity," said Marlene Sanchez, 26.
In life, Romero was loved by the poor, whom he defended passionately, and loathed by conservatives who considered him too close to left-leaning movements in the tumultuous years ahead of El Salvador's 1980-92 civil war.
The archbishop was shot through the heart by a sniper while celebrating Mass in a cancer hospital chapel on March 24, 1980.
Those words were read aloud Saturday: "I beg you, I beseech you, I order you, in the name of God, cease the repression."
The trigger man has never been identified, and no one has been prosecuted for the killing. Alleged paramilitary death squad leader Roberto d'Aubuisson, who was named by a UN truth commission after the war's end as the mastermind of the assassination, died in 1992 having maintained his innocence to the end.
Romero's beatification was held up for years by church politics until then-Pope Benedict XVI "unblocked" the case in late 2012, after it was determined he had not been an adherent of revolutionary liberation theology as many claimed. Earlier this year, Pope Francis declared that Romero was martyred out of hatred of his faith, clearing the way for beatification.
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