Joaquín Navarro-Valls has passed away in Rome this afternoon, due to pancreatic cancer. The former director of the Press Office of the Holy See has died in his Roman residence, accompanied by the faithful of the Opus Dei prelature with whom he lived.

Opus Dei. RECENT NEWS July 5, 2017

The vigil will take place tomorrow, starting at 4pm in the sacristy of the basilica of St Eugene (Viale delle Belle Arti 10, Rome). The funeral will be celebrated by Monsignor Mariano Fazio, Vicar General of the Prelature of Opus Dei, on Friday, July 7 at 11am.

Cartagena, Granada, Barcelona

Joaquín Navarro-Valls was born in Cartagena (Spain) on November 16, 1936. He attended the “Deutsche Schule” in his hometown and studied at the medical faculty of the Universities of Granada and Barcelona. He was an assistant in the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Barcelona and in charge of the Polyclinic Service in the department of Medical Pathology.

Joaquín Navarro-Valls came into contact with Opus Dei when, as a medical student in Granada, he applied to Albayzín Hall of Residence. In those university years, he devoted himself to theatre, not only as a spectator, but mainly as an actor. After finishing the degree in Barcelona, he returned to Granada. In the meantime he had asked to be admitted to Opus Dei, and when he returned to the Andalusian city, he was entrusted with the direction of that same Hall of Residence where he had been a resident.

From medicine to communication

After completing his medical degree he specialised in Psychiatry. In order not to abandon his literary preoccupations, he also studied Journalism, a degree he completed in 1968. A few years later, his activity as a journalist would give him access to the job for which he would become best known.

In the sixties, he was secretary of the Opus Dei Delegation in Barcelona and generously collaborated in the carrying out of various apostolic, social and educational initiatives in Catalonia and Aragon. The main promoters of Xaloc School, in L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, the most populous city of Barcelona’s working belt, have not stopped emphasising how much they owe to the tenacious and optimistic impulse they received, in those early moments, from Joaquín Navarro-Valls. He was also one of the promoters of the start of the formative work with families in the city of Tarragona.

IN THE EARLY 1970S HE MOVED TO ROME AND COLLABORATED WITH ST JOSEMARÍA ESCRIVÁ IN THE COMMUNICATION TASKS OF OPUS DEI

In the early 1970s he moved to Rome and collaborated with St Josemaría Escrivá in the communication tasks of Opus Dei, where he had to inform about the death of the founder (June 26, 1975) and the election of his successor, the now Blessed Álvaro del Portillo. Years later, just before the canonisation of the founder of Opus Dei, he wrote these words in the Roman Osservatore: “Josemaría Escrivá helps us see that a saint does not move in a world of shadows and illusions, but in this world of ours. Human and concrete realities, in which there is a ‘something divine’ that ‘is already there’ waiting for man to know how to find it”.

In Rome he also worked as correspondent of ABC newspaper. That position included Eastern Mediterranean countries, forcing him to travel frequently to countries in the Middle East. He developed many friendships among his colleagues, and in 1983 was elected president of the Stampa Estera, the association of foreign correspondents in the Eternal City.

With St John Paul II and Benedict XVI

In 1984, St John Paul II appointed him director of the Vatican Press Office. Since then, his figure has been associated with that of Pope Wojtyla until his death in 2005, and then also that of Benedict XVI, with whom he continued to hold the same position during the first fifteen months of his pontificate.

His relationship with St John Paul II was very close: the Pope entrusted him with delicate missions to figures such as Gorbachev or Fidel Castro, and it was with him and a few other people that he spent some summer periods of rest in the mountains.

“AFTER ALL THESE YEARS, DO YOU THINK IT WORTH COMPLICATING YOUR LIFE IN OPUS DEI?”; “ONE HUNDRED FIFTY PERCENT YES”

He felt a sincere veneration for St John Paul II. “I am aware that I will be held accountable to God”, he said in 1993, still in the lifetime of the Polish pontiff, “for the immense luck of having been able to work near a man in whose surroundings the existence of grace is felt. Rather, it is felt in the depths of his prayer, and in the decisions he makes as a consequence of that prayer”. His shock in the hours before the death of the Pope, on April 1, 2005, was immortalised by television cameras.

In 2006, when he turned seventy, he was relieved in the press office of the Holy See by Father Federico Lombardi. Later on, he was for some time a columnist for the newspaper La Repubblica and on several Italian and international television channels. In the last years of his life, since January 2007, he was president of the Advisory Board of the University Campus Bio-Medico of Rome. In addition, he got involved in other initiatives of social and cultural interest.

Many have seen in the person of Joaquín Navarro-Valls a witness of faithfulness to the Church, to his vocation to Opus Dei, to his relatives and friends. “After all these years, do you think it worth complicating you life in Opus Dei?” Asked a RAI journalist in 1995, during a television interview. “One hundred and fifty percent yes”, he replied.