Adilio Daronch was a Brazilian catholic teenager who loved football but pursued altar serving after his First Communion and was baptized on November 1st, 1913 at the age of 5 after the family moved to Nonoai. He had 7 siblings. In 1911, they moved to Passo Fundo from Agordo, Italy. His father, who married his mother on January 15th, 1905, was murdered in 1923. The bishop of Santa Maria had asked Manuel to the Teutonic colonies, Manuel chose to enlist Adilio in his travels. He had accompanied Manuel before when visiting the Kaingang Indians. They left for the colonies on March 2nd, around Easter. In Palmeria, Manuel pleaded with the Revolutionaries to practice mutual respect and forgiveness. They were angered by this and plotted to kill them both after Manuel and Adilio gave their victims Christian burials. On May 20th, 1924, they stopped in Braga to ask for directions. Unbeknownst to them, soldiers were stationed there. Adilio attended Manuel's last mass there, inside a ruined chapel despite being warned by the locals to not enter the forest. They were ambushed the next day. They were ordered off their mules, marched to an isolated area, bound to separate trees, then shot. Four days later, on May 25th, their remains were discovered and buried. In 1964 they were exhumed and relocated to a church in Nonoai. A monument was erected, marking their place of death. His beatification cause was opened on March 29th, 1996 by St. Pope John Paul II. The investigation was validated on December 4th, 1998. Historians approved the dossier on February 13th, 2001. On September 26th, 2006, theologians approved it as well. Manuel and Adilio were both beatified on October 21st, 2007. Daronch was made patron of WYD-2013 and in 2012, patron of the Diocese of Frederico Westphalen. His attribute is a palm.