Wojtyla learned of the news with great sorrow and thought about Padre Pio. He composed a letter, written in Latin and addressed to Padre Pio, and sent it to Msgr. Angelo Battisti, the administrator of the hospital “Home for the Relief of Suffering,” founded by Padre Pio. Msgr. Battisti personally delivered the letter to Padre Pio, who after having read it said, “Angelo, I cannot say no to this request.”
Eleven days later, Msgr. Battisti returned to San Giovanni Rotondo with a second letter from Archbishop Wojtyla, in which he thanked Padre Pio, saying, “The lady who was ill with cancer was suddenly healed before entering the operating room." Today, Dr. Wanda Poltawska is 101 years old, the recipient of a true miracle from the hand of God through the intercession of Saint Pio and at the request of the future Saint John Paul II.
Karol Wojtyla was repeatedly touched by Padre Pio and his legacy, first as a priest in 1947, then as a cardinal in 1974 when he visited San Giovanni Rotondo, and again in 1987 as a pope when he marked the 100th anniversary of Padre Pio's birth.
But it was that first encounter — along with Wojtyla's belief that it was Padre Pio's intercession that had cured his friend Wanda Poltawska from cancer in 1962 — that helps to explain why Saint John Paul II was undoubtedly so important in the canonization of Padre Pio.