Gabriel Montalvo Higuera

Gabriel Montalvo Higuera (January 27, 1930August 2, 2006) was born in Bogotá, Colombia. He was an archbishop of the Roman Catholic Church, and was the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States from 1998 until 2005.

Ministry and Assignments

Ordained a priest on January 18, 1953, just days before his 23rd birthday, Archbishop Montalvo has been the Papal representative to many countries.

As the nuncio, he served as the ambassador of Vatican City to the United States, as well as serving as a senior communication link between the Holy See and the Catholic Church in the United States. Clerics receiving appointments from Rome are traditionally informed through him. The nuncio's official residence is the Nunciature to the United States in Washington, DC.

On August 2, 2006, Archbishop Montalvo died in Rome of lung cancer, a disease from which he had been suffering since before his retirement in December 2005. From his retirement until his death, he was under the care of the Sisters of Mercy.

Knowledge of Sex Abuse

On September 7, 2018, Father Boniface Ramsey, pastor of St. Joseph’s Church Yorkville in New York City, revealed to the Catholic News Service a secret letter which Leonardo Sandri, the former Vatican substitute for general affairs and current Prefect for the Congregation for the Oriental Churches, stated in the letter wrote to him concerning sex abuse committed against seminaries by Cardinal Theodore McCarrick.[2] Sandri, who was then serving as the Vatican substitute for general affairs, stated in the letter, dated October 11, 2006,[2] The letter revealed that Ramsey had reported the allegations of sex abuse to Montalvo in November 2000.[2]

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Agostino Cacciavillan
Apostolic Nuncio to the United States
7 December 1998 – 17 December 2005
Succeeded by
Pietro Sambi

References


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