managua march
© Alfredo Zuniga APThousands of people gather outside Managua's Cathedral during Saturday's massive march called by the Catholic Church as a day of prayer, in Managua, Nicaragua
Embattled Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, battered by two weeks of street protests so violent many of his political enemies are openly saying he's lost control of his government, offered an impressive show of strength in rebuttal Monday, leading tens of thousands of supporters in a pledge to "say yes to peace!" at a huge street rally.

"We must say no to death, no to destruction, no to violence, no to barbarity!" Ortega said, leading his supporters in raising their hands as if swearing an oath. "Yes to life, yes to dialogue, yes to work , yes to peace!" The crowd roared in mighty approval.

Ortega's supporters mounted the rally in response to a chain of Saturday demonstrations across the country demanding his resignation - the biggest of them, with a crowd as big as 150,000 by some estimates, just a couple of miles down the street from where the Sandinistas gathered.

Ortega needed "a sea of people" to show "the love and care that we have for our undisputed leader," the Sandinista communique announcing the rally said, and he certainly got it. While Ortega's demonstration was not nearly as big as that of the opposition - and certainly included some ringers, government employees ordered to attend - it was nonetheless an impressive achievement.

His supporters filled a small plaza on a traffic circle near the Hilton Princess Hotel on the capital's south side, the crowd extending out for blocks in all directions along the four streets exiting the traffic circle. Except for Ortega's somewhat meandering but popularly received speech at the end, there was no talking, just singing and dancing along to some four hours of recorded music.

Many of the songs were old party hymns from the 1960s and 1970s, when the Sandinistas were a guerrilla group fighting to topple Nicaragua's decades-old Somoza-family political dynasty. Old Sandinistas in the crowd sang reverently along to the tunes on Monday, some with eyes looking off into a distant past.

But there was also music clearly aimed at Nicaragua's here and now. The DJ played at least 10 Spanish-language versions of the old Ben E. King record "Stand By Me," an anguished plea for loyalty in the darkest night of the soul, as Ortega's supporters sang along in obvious comprehension.

"You have to remember we had war for such a long time," said Ortega supporter Aura Montaño, a 54-year-old accountant, her eyes glistening. "Now we're developing, in health, in education, in everything. And all these advances were under the comandante."

Not everybody, perhaps, shared her spontaneous enthusiasm. "A lot of these people work for the government, and the government told them to be here," said a taxi driver whose cab stand was surrounded by the crowd. "The government pays them, so they do it."

Demonstrators wearing work shirts from the government electric company and healthcare organizations were numerous. So were uniformed workers from several Sandinista-controlled city halls, some in towns as far away as Rio Blanco, more than a four-hour drive east of Managua.

And more than a few members of the crowd looked like they would rather be anywhere else, sullenly refusing to talk with reporters about how much they supported the government. "Go ask that woman waving the flag," snapped one, pointing at a demonstrator wildly waving a black-and-red Sandinista banner.

But the overwhelming majority seemed sincere in their devotion to Ortega. "Most of us Nicaraguans still support the government," said 27-year-old Roberto Fonseca, who works for a private company in Managua. "We've got people on the other side, of course, but most of us believe the government is working for the general good of the country."

Like the opposition rally on Saturday, the Sandinista rally was completely peaceful. The 19th Of April Student Movement, an umbrella organization for the many small student groups who've traded punches with Sandinista supporters and - and, in dozens of cases, been fatally gunned down by them - had promised to stay off the streets until Wednesday and kept its word.

The peaceful demonstrations of the past three days have been a dramatic contrast to the bloody street battles of the previous two weeks, which according to human rights groups took as many as 63 lives and left more than 400 injured.

The protests began after Ortega announced a rise in social security taxes and a reduction in services in mid-April. In the wake of the violent response by police, the protests have broadened into general demand that Ortega and Murillo leave office. The Catholic Church has called for an organized dialogue between the government and its opponents, which is expected to get under way in early May.