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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | Issues | December 2006 

Priest Swears, Sings and Slings a Gun as He Serves Poor Parish
email this pageprint this pageemail usAlfredo Corchado - Dallas Morning News


Alfredo Gallegos Lara, aka Padre Pistolas, sings with a local band at his church in Chucandiro, Mexico. The rough-edged priest, who drives a truck and can curse a blue streak, sells his CDs and DVDs to fund good deeds. (Erich Schlegel/DMN)
Chucandiro, Michoacán – This jolly 240-pound man isn't dressed in red, and he doesn't rely on reindeer to pull a sled. Instead, he drives a pickup and packs a .38 pistol as he delivers toys. And though he looks like a cowboy, he's a man of the cloth.

Meet Alfredo Gallegos Lara, the parish priest of tiny Chucandiro, in the central state of Michoacán, 200 miles west of Mexico City. Dubbed "Padre Pistolas" (Father Guns), the towering, singing priest will deliver toys to the neediest children this holiday season and bring smiles in a region torn apart by heavy migration to the U.S. and a violent turf war between drug traffickers.

"All that's left for the people of this region is faith," he said. "My job is to help them maintain, or restore their faith and hope."

Padre Pistolas admits he's unconventional. He sells CDs and DVDs of himself singing popular ranchera songs and uses some of the proceeds to fund good deeds and public works projects, which have earned him the praise of many locals. Among them is Blanca Nelly Calderón, a 23-year-old elementary school teacher and waitress.

"He can be full of himself," Ms. Calderón said as Padre Pistolas dined on stew at her family's restaurant.

"But we judge for his actions, not for what he says, and he does more than any other priest, certainly more than the government."

The padre praised the stew with a profanity-laced compliment.

"Ay, Padre," Ms. Calderón said with a sigh.

In this traditional town, it's his down-to-earth style, he said, that helps him connect with his parishioners year round, but especially during the Christmas season. He sees his job as ministering to those who sometimes end up on the wrong side of the border or the law.

Tough all over

Michoacán, the home state of President Felipe Calderón, is one of Mexico's poorest and most troubled states. It sends large numbers of immigrants to the United States. Some who stay find work in the drug trade. The area is known for producing marijuana and methamphetamine.

The state is also the scene of a bloody turf war that has claimed about 500 lives, a large share of the estimated 2,200 drug-related killings nationwide this year. Mr. Calderón sent more than 6,000 troops and federal police to the state this month to regain control.

Caught in the middle are children, some of them orphans, who would face a bleak Christmas and 6th of January – Three Kings Day – without Padre Pistolas.

"They're innocent children who need to believe in el Niño Dios [the Christ Child] and the good of mankind," he said.

Ministering to all kinds

His parishioners include lonely women who walk to his chapel and complain of absent husbands and broken families; widows and mothers who lost their husbands or sons and daughters to drug violence; and fathers who return home from places like Dallas and feel like strangers in their own land.

These days, you can also find Padre Pistolas singing alongside emigrants visiting home. When the music dies, he might lecture them for being "cheap and irresponsible" for not sending enough money to help their families or fix up the community – including a contribution for the church bell, which is undergoing its first makeover in 111 years.

But his biggest peeve is infidelity. He castigates those who cheat on their wives with "those big, domineering American women up north" only to hurt their families in Mexico.

"He keeps us straight, accountable for our actions," said Celedonio López Ambriz, 29, who was visiting from Portland.

The padre's blunt style and gun-toting ways have brought him criticism from the Catholic Church hierarchy. His superiors have urged him to focus more on sermons than on being a showboat, said one church official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Padre Pistolas downplays the criticism, saying that a little profanity hardly compares to the highly publicized cases of pedophile priests who have scandalized the church in recent years. On a recent Sunday, his use of profanity during the sermon made some parishioners cringe and others smile or chuckle.

"Sometimes he can get under your skin," said Efraín Tapia, 51, a rancher, "and you always have to be prepared to put your hands over the children's ears."

"Yes, I know sometimes I get on my soap box and let out a few too many cuss words," he said. "But the church has more pressing moral issues to deal with. Also, my parishioners want someone they can relate to, not someone who will just stand up in front of them and preach."

Sometimes after Mass he puts on his cowboy hat, tight jeans and crocodile boots and hangs out with parishioners. He'll pick up his guitar and belt out a few tunes. He'll take a swig or two of tequila. And he's never far from his shiny black revolver.

Why the gun?

About a half-dozen of his close friends have been shot, he explained. His church has been broken into, and three of his trucks have been stolen. He carries the gun for protection, especially when he goes into remote villages to give last rites to drug traffickers or hear a widow's confession.

"I've never used my gun, and I never plan to, but confronted with a bad situation, we have the right to defend ourselves," he said. "These are very dangerous villages."

It's his willingness to minister to all those who need help that has earned him respect.

Full plate

The pistol-packing priest is raising money to renovate a crumbling church and to improve schools. He hopes to build a road linking the isolated community to a highway, funded partly by donations from immigrants in the U.S. He serves as a link between immigrant communities in the U.S. and their struggling homes in Mexico.

Last summer Padre Pistolas said Sunday Mass at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church near Love Field – and sold CDs afterward, said Father Salvador Guzmán, a priest there. Several parishioners knew the padre from Mexico, Father Guzmán said.

"Many of the people of the parish felt very comfortable with him. There was a clear connection," Father Guzmán said. "He was well-received. He speaks to the immigrant hope, their pain, and their longing for home."

"Some of the people seemed to get offended by his use of language," Father Guzmán added, "but for the most part he was able to connect with the parishioners."

The padre also visited Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Dallas, where he sang for parishioners. During a week's visit in Dallas, he sold about 500 of his CDs, he said, raising money for the road project and his annual Christmas toy drive.

"I feel an obligation to them for supporting the projects back home and to their families, especially the children, who smile at the sight of a toy," he said. "If I stop being Padre Pistolas and focus on routine chores, nothing gets done. And this community needs more projects than baptisms."

Email acorchado@dallasnews.com



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