14 Families — El Salvador

The phrase las catorce familias still haunts the national conversation because it is the closest thing El Salvador has to an original sin. It is not just a list of last names. It is a reminder that democracy, in a country where a handful of bloodlines own the earth, has always been a fragile, unfinished experiment.

That quote—whether exact or embellished—became the national epitaph. By 1979, the country is a powder keg. The Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) has risen in the mountains, carrying the ghosts of 1932 with them. The United States, terrified of another Nicaragua, pours $1 billion a year into the Salvadoran military. And the Fourteen? They face a choice: reform or burn. el salvador 14 families

Take the Kriete family (descendants of the old Fourteen through marriage). They own Grupo Agrisal, which controls hotels, shopping malls, and the largest private bank. They endorsed Bukele. The Salaverría family (another oligarchic line) owns La Prensa Gráfica, the country’s largest newspaper. Bukele has attacked them as “the old regime”—but he has not broken their monopolies. The phrase las catorce familias still haunts the

And they are correct: it is a myth. There are not fourteen families today. There are fewer. The concentration has only intensified. The United States, terrified of another Nicaragua, pours