Valerian Gracias was born in
Karachi,
British India (in modern
Pakistan), to José (d. 1902) and Carlota Gracias. His parents were from
Dramapur-
Navelim,
Goa, working in Karachi. He studied at
St. Patrick's High School in Karachi, St. Joseph
Seminary in
Mangalore, and the Pontifical Seminary of
Kandy in
Ceylon, Gracias then did
pastoral work in
Bandra until November 1927, when he entered the
Pontifical Gregorian University in
Rome. He finished his studies at the Gregorian in 1929 and became
private secretary to Archbishop Joachim Lima
SJ and
diocesan chancellor of
Bombay. Gracias demonstrated his support of Goan nationalism and an opponent of Portuguese colonial rule by presenting an image of the Virgin Mary as an indigenous Indian, at a time when the populace was still accustomed to European representations. On 29 November 1952 Pope Pius XII announced he would create 24 new cardinals, increasing the size of the College of Cardinals to 70 members, its maximum at the time. When one of them died on 28 December, the Vatican announced on 29 December that Gracias would be made a cardinal, the first from India. He was made
Cardinal-Priest of
S. Maria in Via Lata in the
consistory of 12 January 1953. Gracias was considered to be a
conservative. The Portuguese government denied reports that it was displeased with the honor bestowed upon Gracias. He was one of the 51 cardinal electors in the
1958 papal conclave and one of the 80 in the
conclave of 1963. He attended the
Second Vatican Council (1962–1965), where he was one of 21 Council participants to present the closing messages of the Council on 8 December 1965. He hosted the first papal visit to India in 1964, when Pope Paul VI attended the
International Eucharistic Congress in Bombay, He later said that Pope Paul VI's Bombay visit inspired his encyclical
Populorum progressio (1967). From 1954 to 1972, he was President of the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of India and in 1972 helped overcome Vatican skepticism and win Pope Paul's approval of the formation of the
Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences. He fell ill in May 1978 and did not participate in the
conclave of
August 1978. Gracias died from
cancer in
Bombay 11 September 1978 at age 77. ==References==