The Day

Chief Vatican spokesman under Pope John Paul II dies

- By VICTOR L. SIMPSON

Rome — Joaquin Navarro-Valls, a suave, silver-haired Spaniard who was a close confidant of Pope John Paul II, serving for more than two decades as chief Vatican spokesman, has died at the age of 80.

Manuel Sanchez, spokesman for the Opus Dei movement in Rome of which Navarro-Valls was a member, said he died Wednesday after a long illness. Opus Dei said on its website that he had been suffering from pancreatic cancer.

Navarro-Valls was fiercely loyal to John Paul, accompanyi­ng the Polish pope on most of his 104 internatio­nal trips. He also performed delicate diplomatic missions, such as helping to prepare the pope’s historic pilgrimage to Cuba.

Known for his coolness and restraint, Navarro-Valls nearly broke into tears when John Paul was dying in April 2005. He choked up and walked out of a conference room when a German reporter at a briefing on the pope’s condition asked him how he personally felt.

“I was trying to keep my emotions in check, but then a reporter asked how I was experienci­ng the passing of the pope personally, and I couldn’t control myself,” he explained later.

Navarro-Valls, who spoke four languages, was a foreign correspond­ent for the Spanish newspaper ABC when John Paul offered him the job as director of the Vatican press office. He was the first journalist to hold the post.

He was a lay member of the conservati­ve Catholic movement Opus Dei, an order much favored by the pope, but Navarro-Valls always insisted the fact he was president of Rome’s Foreign Press Associatio­n at the time weighed heavily in his hiring at the Vatican.

Navarro-Valls was credited with bringing computer technology to the press office, promoting the use of multiple languages in the Italian-centric press operation and giving journalist­s better access — making him the perfect press aide for a pope known for his media savvy.

Navarro-Valls held degrees in both journalism and medicine, specializi­ng in psychiatry.

Some saw the combinatio­n as perfect for his job as papal “spin doctor.”

In 1997, just a few months before the papal pilgrimage to Cuba, he flew to Havana and was summoned for what turned out to be a six-hour-long encounter with Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

Navarro-Valls said he told Castro that the pope had one particular request — that the regime restore the Christmas holiday that was abolished under communism. Castro kept his word to do so, and the holiday is still celebrated today.

With three successive non-Italian popes, Navarro-Valls helped lead a quiet revolution to internatio­nalize the Vatican. The current spokesman is an American, Greg Burke, a former Fox correspond­ent.

Burke’s assistant is the first woman to hold a ranking position in the press office. Paloma Garcia Ovejero worked as a Spanish TV journalist before accepting the Vatican post.

Burke said that Navarro-Valls “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,” Burke recalled in a note. “I expected to find a man of faith, but I found a man of faith who was also a first-class profession­al.”

He recalled Navarro-Valls working at the U.N. Population Conference in Cairo in 1994, calling it “one of the best examples of what Pope Francis calls ideologica­l colonizati­on. It was fascinatin­g to see someone who was defending the faith, but he wasn’t on the defensive. He was leading the fight.”

Burke continued, “I didn’t always agree with Navarro, but he always behaved like a Christian gentlemen, and those can be hard to find these days.”

As the Vatican spokesman, Navarro-Valls naturally sought to put the pope in the best light. He said he always regretted overreacti­ng when he barred the Vatican correspond­ent of the Italian newspaper La Repubblica from the papal plane for criticizin­g the pope in a column.

 ?? GREGORIO BORGIA/AP FILE PHOTO ?? Former Pope John Paul II spokespers­on Joaquin NavarroVal­ls smiles prior to the start of a press conference on April 25, 2014, at the Vatican. He died Wednesday.
GREGORIO BORGIA/AP FILE PHOTO Former Pope John Paul II spokespers­on Joaquin NavarroVal­ls smiles prior to the start of a press conference on April 25, 2014, at the Vatican. He died Wednesday.

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