Fra’ John T. Dunlap, a Canadian who was named lieutenant of the grand master of the Sovereign Order of Malta, took his solemn oath June 14 in the Church of St. Mary in Rome. CNS photo/Order of Malta

Canadian lawyer sworn in as leader of Knights of Malta

By 
  • June 15, 2022

VATICAN CITY -- A Canadian, Fra’ John T. Dunlap, has been sworn in as the new leader of the Knights of Malta.

Dunlap, a member of the sovereign council, was appointed lieutenant of the grand master of the Sovereign Order of Malta by Pope Francis June 13 and sworn in June 14 in Rome’s Church of St. Mary on the Aventine in the presence of Cardinal Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican’s special delegate to the order, and members of the sovereign council.

Dunlap succeeds Fra’ Marco Luzzago, who led the Knights of Malta since late 2020 and died June 7 after a sudden illness, at the age of 71.

Dunlap was born in Ottawa in 1957 and studied at the University of Nice, France, the University of Ottawa, and the University of Western Ontario, where he earned his law degree. He was awarded an honorary doctorate in public service by the John Cabot University in Rome.

Dunlap is an attorney admitted to the New York State Bar and a barrister and solicitor of the bar of Ontario. He joined the law firm of Dunnington, Bartholow & Miller in New York in 1986 and became a partner in 1993, specializing in corporate and immigration law.

Since 1997 he has been a legal advisor to the Permanent Observer Mission of the Holy See to the United Nations in New York. Admitted to the Order of Malta in 1996, Dunlap took temporary vows as a Knight of Justice in 2004, and he took his solemn vows as the first American member in 2008. He was elected for a five-year term as a member of the sovereign council in 2009 and was reelected in 2014 and in 2019.

The order had said in a statement June 8 that Fra’ Ruy Gonçalo do Valle, the grand commander, had assumed the role of interim lieutenant with Luzzago’s death, and would “remain head of the sovereign order until the election of the new head of the order.”

However, Pope Francis decided to choose the new leader.

The order said in a statement June 13 that “Pope Francis’ decision will allow the Order of Malta to accelerate the reform process and return to an ordinary administration under a grand master soon afterward. The Order of Malta is grateful to the Holy Father for his paternal solicitude.”

Since 2017 the order has been involved in a process to revise its constitution, which is why members chose to elect a lieutenant rather than a grand master, who traditionally served for life.

The Knights of Malta have 13,500 members, as well as 80,000 volunteers and 25,000 medical professionals providing relief and humanitarian aid in 120 countries.

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