Valladolid says goodbye to Teresa Rodríguez, the young woman murdered by her ex-boyfriend: “I hope her family finds peace”

Teresa Rodríguez Llamazares, 23, who had started working as a nurse at the Jules Bordet Institute in Brussels last June, had decided to break up with her partner, a 24-year-old who was completing his training as a civil guard in Valladolid. He did not accept her decision and traveled to Brussels, where he decided to end her life by stabbing her in her flat. The young man then jumped out of the window, but did not die and was detained by Belgian police. Teresa Rodríguez Social networks This Saturday the funeral for Teresa was held in the church of San Pedro in Valladolid. Dozens of the young woman’s friends and colleagues have been seen hugging each other, as well as the victim’s family. It so happens that the father, who worked as a doctor in the town hall, had retired one day before his daughter lost her life. “None of us expected it,” says one of his friends. It leaves you very shocked. You do not understand the reasons, the reality of what is happening.” “We want to give all the support to the family –says another-. May they manage to find the peace that has been taken from them in such an incomprehensible way.” Week of condolences Teresa’s death has overwhelmed Valladolid, which has spent a week of tributes in memory of the victim. “Dear companion and student”, reminded her of the Condesa Eylo High School of Valladolid, where she studied. “Ensemble nous disons NON à la violence machiste, together we say no to male violence”, said the French Liceo de Castilla y León, where the young woman also studied. “From the Faculty of Nursing of the University of Valladolid we express our rejection of the sexist crime of our TRLL graduate, and we accompany her entire family in these difficult times”, her university colleagues also transferred from social networks. Concentration in Valladolid in memory of Teresa Teresa’s resume also included her time at the Hemotherapy Center of Castilla y León, where she worked for eleven months before going to Brussels. “A great professional, charming and kind, that’s how we will remember your colleagues and the donors you served”, said her colleagues, concentrated with ties and purple hands against sexist violence. And finally in Brussels, her last work destination, where her colleagues remembered her this Thursday at the gates of the Jules Bordet Institute.