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Joaquin Navarro-Valls, Former Vatican Spokesman, Dies Of Cancer

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Joaquin Navarro-Valls, Former Vatican Spokesman, Dies Of Cancer

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Joaquin Navarro-Valls, who spent 22 years as director of the Vatican press office, died at home in Rome July 5 at age 80 following a battle
with pancreatic cancer.

The current director of the Vatican press office, Greg Burke, announced his death
in a tweet.

In a statement to Catholic News Service, Burke said he did not always agree with
Navarro-Valls, but his predecessor “always behaved like a Christian
gentleman — and those can be hard to find these days.”

“Joaquin Navarro embodied what Ernest Hemingway defined as courage: grace under pressure. I got to know Navarro when I was working for Time, and the magazine named John Paul II Man of the Year. I expected to find a man of faith, but I found a man of faith who was also a first-class professional.”

Burke said he remembered watching Navarro-Valls closely during the 1994 U.N. International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo, which Burke described as “one of the best examples of what Pope Francis calls
ideological colonization. It was fascinating to see someone who was defendingbthe faith, but he wasn’t on the defensive. He was leading the fight.”

Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, who succeeded Navarro-Valls as Vatican press director beginning in 2006, remembered him as a “master in the way he carried out his service.”

“Navarro always remained a friend for me, an example of discreet spiritual life, true and profound, fully integrated in his work, a model of dedication at the
service of the pope and the church, a master of communications, although for me — as I have already said, but repeat — inimitable,” Father Lombardi said
in an editorial published July 6 on Vatican Radio.

Greg Erlandson, director and editor-in-chief of Catholic News Service, covered the Vatican for CNS from 1986-89. He said that as the first lay director of the
Vatican press office, Navarro-Valls “was a groundbreaking figure in Vatican communications.”

“He raised the level of professionalism at the press office and embodied that
professionalism in his relationship with the world’s news media. He exemplified
the ideal that one could be a fully professional communicator and at the same time be a person of deep faith,” Erlandson said in a July 6 statement.

“In this way, he was the perfect collaborator with the pope he so loyally served, St. John Paul II,” he said.

Born in Cartagena, Spain, Nov. 16, 1936, Navarro-Vallsvjoined Opus Dei after meeting St. Josemaria Escriva.

He studied internal medicine and psychiatry before obtaining degrees in journalismvand communications sciences. He moved to Rome in 1970, where he collaborated with the Opus Dei founder.

He became a correspondent for the Spanish newspaper ABC and was elected twice as president of the Rome-based Foreign Press Association in Italy before becoming the first lay journalist to become director of the Vatican Press Office when he was appointed by St. John Paul II in 1984.

After leaving his post at the Vatican, he served as president of the advisory board
of the Opus Dei-affiliated Campus Biomedical University in Rome until his
death.

An author of books on the family and fluent in several languages, Navarro-Valls often provided colorful, picturesque details concerning St. John Paul’s
activities and daily life. He also acted many times as an adviser to the pope
on the media impact of papal decisions.

Hevtraveled with St. John Paul on almost all his apostolic journeys and became a
well-recognized figure, especially after the pope became ill in 2004. He
regularly held press conferences to relay news to the world of the pope’s
deteriorating condition.

In 1992, Navarro-Valls overhauled the press office with a $2 million technological face-lift along with much-needed, modernized facilities. He also revolutionizedvthe distribution of material by making archives, documents and statistics concerning the pope’s activity available online.

A wake was held July 6 at Rome’s Basilica of St. Eugene. His funeral was to be
presided by Msgr. Mariano Fazio, vicar general of Opus Dei, July 7.

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