Nuestra Señora del Refugio paints mural in honor of Father Keane
If I wasn’t traveling to El Salvador in three weeks, I could say with confidence that I’d seen everything.
I don’t care what your soft spot is, whether it’s the mannerists or the pre-Raphaelites, gothic or baroque, Michaelangelo or Raphael, you must admit: that’s one well-adorned block of concrete. Click here or the photo to the left to see more, including a few of the artist at work.
Especially moving is the banner that sits atop the TLAU logo which reads “Nuestros Angelos tienen Nombre” which translates as “Our Angels have names.” I’d like to join Nuestra Senora del Refugio in thanking Father Keane for all he does, not only as the most active TLAU officer, but also as a pastor of souls.
Santa Maria, Madre de Dios, ruega por nosotros, pecadores, ahora y en la hora de nuestra muerte!


Thanks to my parents, Leonard and Sharon Nelson, I will be spending my spring break driving around El Salvador with Walter. It’s been almost two years (or more) since I’ve visited, a fact that is only contributing to the excitement. How funny it is that I have grown so fond of a country and culture that at one time appeared so strange that it frightened me.
Walter sent a few photos of the packets of school supplies handed out to the needy children of Centro Escolar Nuestra Señora de los Pobres in Zacatecoluca (see
arts in January, 100 of the school’s smallest students received a small bookbag or “mochila” containing a notebook, crayons, pens, and pencils.