In 1668, San Vitores set sail from
Acapulco to Guam. San Vitores called the Chamorro archipelago "Islas Marianas" (
Mariana Islands) in honor of the Queen Regent of Spain,
Maria Ana of Austria, and the
Blessed Virgin Mary. The missionary landed on Guam in the village of
Hagåtña and was greeted by
Chief Kepuha. Kepuha's family donated land to establish the first Catholic mission on Guam. On February 2, 1669, San Vitores established the first Catholic Church in Hagåtña and dedicated it to "the sweet name of Mary," "Dulce Nombre de Maria." According to former journalist and Guampedia editor Tanya Champaco Mendiola: "The Chamorros initially welcomed San Vitores and the other Catholic missionaries, and hundreds were readily converted. The nobles of the community may have believed this would elevate their social status while other village chiefs desired priests for their own village, probably as symbols of status. Some islanders apparently also received the sacrament of baptism more than once for the gifts of beads and clothing they were given. This enthusiasm for Catholicism did not last long, however, as several factors quickly came into play, including the conflicts it created in the hierarchal caste system of the Chamorros. The church preached that once baptized, people were equal in the eyes of God. The missionary’s dogmatic zeal was also not well received as the Jesuits shunned long-standing traditional beliefs and practices in trying to assimilate the Chamorros in Christian doctrine. This included the rejection of the Chamorros long-standing veneration of ancestors. As part of the religious practices of Chamorro culture, people had the skulls of deceased family members placed in baskets in places of honor in their homes. The Chamorros believed that this allowed their deceased to have a place to stay and often sought the guidance of their ancestors and favors from them in their daily endeavors. The missionaries told the Chamorros that their ancestors (including parents and grandparents) were burning in hell because they had not been baptized as Christians." The destruction of venerated ancestral skulls is often cited as a grave and insensitive offense by the missionaries against the indigenous Chamorro people. After
Chief Kepuha died in 1669, Spanish missionary and Chamorro relations worsened, and the
Chamorro–Spanish War began in 1671, led on the Chamorro side by Maga'låhi (Chief)
Hurao. After several attacks on the Spanish mission, peace was negotiated. Though San Vitores claimed to want to emulate
Francis Xavier, who did not use soldiers in his missionization efforts in India, as his model priest, he also felt that a military presence would be necessary to protect the priests serving Guam. In 1672, San Vitores ordered churches built in four
villages, including
Merizo. Later that year, Chamorro resistance increased and San Vitores, along with his sacristan
Pedro Calungsod, was killed by
Matå'pang and Hurao. == Recognition by the church ==