
arlos
Alfonso Azpiroz Costa was born in the city of Buenos Aires,
Argentina, on October 30, 1956, the eighth of a family
of fourteen children (thirteen boys, one girl). His mother,
Nélida Victoria Costa Colombo, who died in 1976,
was a homemaker, and dedicated herself especially to the
raising of her many children. Fr. Carlos' father, Francisco
Azpiroz Gil, who died in 1988, was an agricultural engineer
by profession. He oversaw the family properties, including
a farm which was and remains a meeting place for the whole
family. Fr. Carlos' younger brother Fernando is a member
of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) who currently lives
in Taiwan. In total, Fr. Carlos has thirty-one nieces
and nephews.
Fr. Carlos'
two paternal grandparents were Spaniards, from Navarre:
Miguel Azpiroz Razquin, who was born in Huarte Araquil
at the feet of the Sierras del Aralar, and Enedina Gil,
who came from Luquin, in Tierra Estella. The two met one
another in Buenos Aires and married there. Fr. Carlos'
maternal grandparents, Luis Julio Costa and María
Colombo, were Argentineans of Italian extraction: the
Costas were from Genoa, and the Colombos, from Milan.
Fr. Carlos
completed his primary and secondary education (1963-1974)
at the Colegio Champagnat de Buenos Aires, which is run
by the Marist Brothers; in fact, all thirteen boys in
the family studied there. At the age of eighteen he entered
law school at the Pontificia Universidad Católica
Argentina (UCA). During his years of study (1975-1979)
he worked along with his father in the family business.
For the period of 1978-1979 he was elected president of
the law school student center at UCA.
In 1978 he
met two professors in the University who were friars of
the Order of Preachers, one of them holding the chair
of moral theology at the law school and the other being
his assistant. He began to dialogue with them about the
restlessness he felt about his vocation. His restlessness
was transformed into the certainty of a Dominican calling,
especially after two experiences while on retreat at the
novitiate of the Order in Mar del Plata.
He entered
the Dominican novitiate of the Argentinean Province of
Saint Augustine on March 1, 1980. He made first profession
on February 28, 1981 in the hands of Fr. Michel Jean Paul
Ramlot, who was at that time Prior Provincial of the Argentinean
Province. A little while afterward he passed his one outstanding
final exam at the law school at UCA, thus obtaining his
law degree.
After being
assigned to the Priory of Albert the Great in Buenos Aires
(the philosophy studentate of the simply professed), he
began his philosophy studies at the Centro de Estudios
Institucionales, Priory of Saint Dominic of Buenos Aires.
On March 10, 1984 he made solemn profession in that same
priory. He received his Bachelor of Philosophy degree
at the Universidad del Norte Santo Tomás de Aquino
(UNSTA), a university of the Argentinean Dominican Province.
He began his theological studies in the Centro de Estudios
Institucionales (which is affiliated with the theology
faculty of the UCA), and there received the Bachelor of
Theology degree.
During his
years in the studentate, he was teacher of catechesis
in the high school run by the Dominican Sisters of the
Holy Rosary, and began his university teaching career
both as assistant of the chairs of theological anthropology
and dogmatic theology at the UCA (in the faculties of
economics and law), and also as assistant professor of
social philosophy in the philosophy faculty of UNSTA.
He had pastoral ministry among various groups of youth
of the Movimiento de Jornadas de Vida Cristiana (of the
Archdiocese of Buenos Aires) and in the missionary activities
of the Argentinean Province, especially during his summer
vacations in Valcheta (Río Negro), El Alto (Catamarca),
Maipú (Mendoza) and Puerto Viejo (Corrientes).
These activities were developed in teams, with Dominican
brothers and sisters and various laypeople united with
the Order.
He was ordained
deacon by Cardinal Eduardo Francisco Pironio on August
8, 1986. The following year, on the vigil of the Solemnity
of the Assumption, he was ordained to the priesthood,
again by Cardinal Pironio. Not long afterward, the provincial
chapter named him Secretary of the province. He continued
his academic and pastoral activity (especially with the
Movimiento de Jornadas de Vida Cristiana and as overseer
of the mission in Puerto Viejo, Corrientes).
In September,
1989 the Prior Provincial, with the consent of the then
Master of the Order Damian Byrne, sent Fr. Carlos to Rome
to study canon law at the Angelicum. Being assigned to
the Priory of Santa Sabina during those three years, he
collaborated with various assistants to the Master of
the Order in secretarial jobs, and he was syndic of Santa
Sabina for two years. He received the doctorate in canon
law in November, 1992, and later published his thesis,
"The Provincial Chapter in the Book of Constitutions
and Ordinations of the Order of Friars Preachers--A Comparative
Study with the Constitutions of 1932."
While still
living in Rome he was elected Prior of the Priory of Saint
Martin de Porres (in Mar del Plata), the novitiate of
the Argentine Province. During which three years that
he held that elected position, he also worked as a professor
in the Universidad FASTA de Mar del Plata, teaching Introduction
to Law to law students, and moral and dogmatic theology
to students in other degree programs in the same university.
He also gave theological lectures at the Center of Study
and Reflection in the diocese of Mar del Plata. From Mar
del Plata he would travel to Buenos Aires to teach courses
on consecrated life at the canon law faculty at UCA and
in the studentate of the Argentinean province. He was
given the charge of ministry to university students in
the diocese of Mar del Plata. He worked quite a bit giving
conferences and coordinating days of reflection on behalf
the diocesan conference of religious sisters, and likewise
being involved in the formation process of the diocesan
conference of men religious. All the while, he gave pastoral
attention to those living in the various neighborhoods
surrounding the priory, along with the rest of his community.
The Provincial
Chapter of 1995 named him Secretary of the Province and
he was elected in November of the same year as prior of
the Priory of Saint Dominic in Buenos Aires, the house
of formation of student brothers in theology and the seat
of the Centro de Estudios Institucionales. As prior of
the community there, he once again took up teaching in
the Centro and in the UCA. He was elected a member of
the conference governing the UNSTA. He presence in Buenos
Aires involved him once again in pastoral work with the
Movimiento de Jornadas de Vida Cristiana. He continued
working in this pastoral/missionary activity in Puerto
Viejo (in the Province of Corrientes) in the northeast
of Argentina. From 1993 to 1997 he was a member of the
Theological Reflection Team of the Argentinean Conference
of Religious (CAR, which now goes by the acronym CONFAR,
for religious men and women).
Around
the middle of 1997 the Master of the Order, Fr. Timothy
Radcliffe, named Fr. Carlos Procurator General of the
Order in Santa Sabina, in Rome. From that point on, he
was professor of "Law on Religious Life" in
the canon law faculty at the Angelicum. He was Rector
of the Basilica of Santa Sabina from 1997 to the end of
2000. Participating as a peritus in the General Elective
Chapter of the Dominican Order at Providence College,
Fr. Carlos was elected Master of the Order on July 14,
2001. 