Death of executive director Carl Hétu is tremendous loss says Development and Peace-Caritas Canada

Development and Peace Executive Director Carl Hétu died May 27, 2026. His impact on the DPCC has been profound, says the Canadian Catholic organization. (Image from the DPCC website)

Media release from Development and Peace-Caritas Canada

Development and Peace ― Caritas Canada (DPCC) announced the death of its executive director, Carl Hétu on May 27, 2026.

Hétu, who had been ailing from cancer for two years, died surrounded by his family. He was 66 years old and is survived by his wife, Lorraine; four children; and three grandchildren.

Well before he began working for DPCC, Hétu was a committed supporter of its mission. His passion for justice and peace was drawn from his deep and abiding Catholic faith, which was also the source of his strength and forbearance as his illness progressed.

A lifetime of service

Hétu first began working for DPCC in 1990. Over the next 14 years, he served as an animator for various regions in Ontario. He was responsible for recruiting, training, coordinating, mobilizing and inspiring members. He also cultivated strong relationships with clergy across the province; led a solidarity trip to Peru; and represented DPCC on a fact-finding mission to Colombia.

In 2004, Hétu took on the directorship in Canada of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association (CNEWA), which supports Catholic charities in the Middle East, North Africa, Eastern Europe and India. He helped reorganize CNEWA’s headquarter operations and shifted its focus to longer-term programs. He also travelled extensively in Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, India, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Russia and Ukraine, and regularly spoke on issues affecting these countries.

A visionary leader

Hétu returned to DPCC in February 2022, when its national council selected him as executive director.

Hétu began by strengthening DPCC’s relationship with the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. With the bishops’ backing, he was able to implement his ambitious vision for the organization.

As idealistic as he was pragmatic, Hétu substantially expanded and reinforced DPCC’s advocacy and philanthropic development functions. His imperative for engaging young people was reflected in the support and resources he committed to growing DPCC youth and school programs, establishing a youth ambassadors program and professionalizing its social media presence.

Hétu achieved all this within the first half of his five-year mandate. In September 2024, he went on medical leave. He resumed his responsibilities in July 2025 and remained engaged in guiding the organization with the help of his fellow directors until the very end of his life.

An inspiring legacy

To DPCC’s president, Gabrielle Dupuis, Hétu was much more than an accomplished leader. She said, “Carl was a man with a big heart whose passion and unifying vision left a profound mark on DPCC. His humane and collaborative approach, along with his ability to listen, helped strengthen bonds within the organization and with our partners, allies and collaborators. His impact on our programs, the way we work together and the many people he touched will continue to be felt for years to come.”

From DPCC:

In our loss, we draw solace from Jesus’s reassurance: “Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die” (John 11:25-26).

We remain inspired by the leadership and memory of Carl Hétu. We will forever be guided by what he had said upon assuming charge as our executive director: “We stand united, as one human family, inspired by the Gospel… to accompany the most vulnerable and mistreated persons at the peripheries of our planet. We won’t rest until dignity and peace are afforded to all.”

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Development and Peace – Caritas Canada was established in 1967 by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops in response to Pope Paul VI’s call to Catholics living in developed nations “to be in the first ranks of those who spare no effort to have just and fair laws, based on moral precepts, established among all nations.” (Populorum Progressio, 81).

Communications and Catholic Saskatoon News are supported by gifts to the Bishop’s Annual Appeal: dscf.ca/baa.