After surviving cancer, a Spanish teen prepares to reunite with the pope who accompanied him through his illness.
During the Jubilee of Youth, held in Rome from July 28 to Aug. 3, 2025, unforgettable scenes filled the Eternal City: young pilgrims singing hymns with guitars, praying quietly near the fountains, and recording videos to share their faith on social media.
Among the thousands of young people who passed through the Holy Door of St. Peter’s Basilica was Ignacio Gonzálvez, a 15-year-old Spaniard. But during the pilgrimage, he began to experience intense chest pain. He was rushed to Bambino Gesù Hospital, where doctors diagnosed him with lymphoblastic lymphoma and a large mass in his chest.
His family traveled to Rome with heavy hearts. The first 12 days were critical: Ignacio’s heart was exhausted, and at any moment he could suffer cardiac arrest. Twenty-four hours after doctors removed his life support, a serious complication arose — an injury to the femoral artery and a blood clot.

Ignacio Gonzálvez and his family at the hospital. | Credit: Carmen Gloria González
“They were the most difficult months of my life and at the same time the most beautiful, because it was the moment when I came closest to God while being on the cross,” Ignacio, now recovered, told ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News.
Ignacio was able to personally share the news of his recovery with Pope Leo XIV on Tuesday, May 12, at the entrance to the papal residence in Castel Gandolfo.
“I gave him the good news that I had been cured and that I was waiting for him in Madrid, since I was returning to Spain just a few days after that meeting,” he said, joyful at the prospect of the pope’s upcoming visit to Spain.
Throughout the ordeal, the Holy Father remained close to Ignacio’s family, whose lives changed completely after the diagnosis.
A few days after Ignacio was admitted to the hospital, Pope Leo XIV arrived unexpectedly in his hospital room, where Ignacio’s parents were praying tirelessly at his bedside. Ignacio was sedated and intubated at the time and was not aware of the visit. Even so, the pope wanted to be close to him and his family in what would become the first of three meetings between them.
The pope remained with the family for about half an hour before visiting other patients in the oncology ward. He prayed the Hail Mary and the Our Father with them, gave each person his blessing, and spoke about the Gospel, eternal life, and the will of God.
“We are made for heaven,” he told them.
Ignacio spent nine months in the hospital. During that time, he came close to death twice.
The pope’s closeness became a source of consolation for the family. It helped them breathe, look toward heaven, and entrust themselves to God. When Pope Leo XIV learned that Ignacio had been discharged, he made room in his schedule to receive the family at the Vatican.
Ignacio went there April 29 with his parents, Pedro Pablo and Carmen Gloria; his sister, Adela; and a family friend.

Pope Leo XIV meets with Ignacio Gonzálvez at the Vatican on April 29, 2026. | Credit: Carmen Gloria Gonzalez
During the meeting, the pope asked about Ignacio’s medical situation. Shortly afterward, he went into another room with the young man for a private conversation. Ignacio himself had asked for that moment of intimacy, and the pope immediately agreed.
Throughout this path of suffering, the family said they felt sustained by prayer and by the many people who hoped for Ignacio’s recovery: young people praying with the pope, the Neocatechumenal communities to which the family belongs, convents, relatives, friends, believers, and nonbelievers alike.
“Faith helped me live this illness in a different way, for example by offering my sufferings for something or for someone,” Ignacio said. “Praying with my mother and father when I was in the hospital also helped me a lot — not only in prayer but also in not feeling alone, because I knew many people were praying for me.”
Ignacio said he experienced God’s love every day.
“I felt God close — more than close — in every detail and in every gift that I know came from him, and he also gave me the strength to fight this illness,” he said. “I was able to see him in myself and also in my mother.”
Almost a year has passed since the nightmare of Ignacio’s hospitalization and the pope’s first visit. Today, that chapter is behind him. The present is healing; the future is a reunion with the pope.
That reunion will take place during Pope Leo XIV’s upcoming apostolic visit to Spain. In Madrid, the Holy Father is expected to meet with the most vulnerable and with young people, celebrate Mass, encounter the local Church, and venerate Our Lady of Almudena.
And once again, he will meet Ignacio.
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, the Spanish-language sister service of EWTN News. It has been translated and adapted by EWTN News.







