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Alberto Hurtado Cruchaga (1901-1952)
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ALBERTO HURTADO CRUCHAGA was born in Viña del Mar, Chile, on 22 January 1901; he
was orphaned when he was four years old by the death of his father. His mother
had to sell, at a loss, their modest property in order to pay the family’s
debts. As a further consequence, Alberto and his brother had to go to live with
relatives and were often moved from one family to another. From an early age,
therefore, he experienced what it meant to be poor, to be without a home and at
the mercy of others.
He was given a scholarship to the Jesuit College in Santiago. Here he became a
member of the Sodality of Our Lady and developed a lively interest in the poor,
spending time with them in the most miserable neighborhoods every Sunday
afternoon.
When he completed his secondary education in 1917, Alberto wanted to become a
Jesuit, but he was advised to delay the realization of this desire in order to
take care of his mother and his younger brother. By working in the afternoons
and evenings, he succeeded in supporting them; at the same time, he studied law
at the Catholic University. In this period, he maintained his care for the poor
and continued to visit them every Sunday. Obligatory military service
interrupted his studies, but once he fulfilled this duty he went on to earn his
degree early in August 1923.
On 14 August 1923 he entered the Novitiate of the Society of Jesus in Chillán.
In 1925 he went to Córdoba, Argentina, where he studied humanities.
In 1927 he was sent to Spain to study philosophy and theology.
However, because
of the suppression of the Jesuits in Spain in 1931, he went on to Belgium and
continued studying theology at Louvain. He was ordained a priest there on 24
August 1933, and in 1935 obtained a doctorate in pedagogy and psychology. After
having completed his Tertianship in Drongen, Belgium, he returned to Chile in
January 1936. Here he began his activity as professor of religion at Colegio San
Ignacio and of Pedagogy at the Catholic University of Santiago. He was entrusted
with the Sodality of Our Lady for the students, and he involved them in teaching
catechism to the poor. He frequently directed retreats and offered spiritual
direction to many young men, accompanying several of them in their response to
the priestly vocation and contributing in an outstanding manner to the formation
of many Christian laymen.
In 1941 Father Hurtado published his most famous book: “Is Chile a Catholic
Country?” The same year he was asked to assume the role of Assistant for the
Youth Movement of the Catholic Action, first within the Archdiocese of Santiago
and then nationally. He performed these roles with an exceptional spirit of
initiative, dedication and sacrifice.
In October 1944, while giving a retreat, he felt impelled to appeal to his
audience to consider the many poor people of the city, especially the numerous
homeless children who were roaming the streets of Santiago. This request evoked
a ready and generous response. This was the beginning of the initiative for
which Father Hurtado is especially well-known: a form of charitable activity
which provided not only housing but a home-like milieu for the homeless: “El
Hogar de Cristo”.
By means of contributions from benefactors and with the active collaboration of
committed laity, Father Hurtado opened the first house for children; this was
followed by a house for women and then one for men. The poor found a warm home
in “El Hogar de Cristo”. The houses multiplied and took on new dimensions; in
some houses there were rehabilitation centers, in others trade-schools, and so
on. All were inspired and permeated by Christian values.
In 1945 Father Hurtado visited the United States to study the “Boys Town”
movement and to consider how it could be adapted to his own country. The last
six years of his life were dedicated to the development of various forms in
which “El Hogar” could exist and function.
In 1947 Father Hurtado founded the Chilean Trade Union Association (ASICH) to
promote a union movement inspired by the social teaching of the Church.
Between 1947 and 1950, Father Hurtado wrote three important works: on trade
unions, on social humanism, and on the Christian social order. In 1951 he
founded “Mensaje”, the well-known Jesuit periodical dedicated to explaining the
doctrine of the Church.
Pancreatic cancer brought him, within a few months, to the end of his life. In
the midst of terrible pain, he was often heard to say, “I am content, Lord.”
After having spent his life manifesting Christ’s love for the poor, Father
Hurtado was called to the Lord on 18 August 1952.
From his return to Chile after his Tertianship to his death, a matter of only
fifteen years, Father Hurtado lived and accomplished all the works described
above. His apostolate was the expression of a personal love for Christ the Lord;
it was characterized by a great love for poor and abandoned children, an
enlightened zeal for the formation of the laity, and a lively sense of Christian
social justice.
Fr. Hurtado was beatified by John Paul II on October 16, 1994.
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