Deccan Chronicle

MEMORIES OF MOTHER

PHOTOGRAPH­ER RAGHU RAI’S FOUR-DECADE LONG JOURNEY DOCUMENTIN­G SOME OF THE MOST MOVING IMAGES OF SAINT TERESA RESULTS IN HIS FOURTH BOOK ON HER

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BHAVANA AKELLA

Istarted photograph­ing Mother Teresa way back in the 1970s when she was hardly known. It was for the magazine editor, Desmond Doig, who wanted to publish a book on her. Later, I decided to bring out my own book of pictures featuring her, and remember this was a time when I was still very young and didn’t have so much sensitivit­y or control over the things I did. And neither was she fond of getting clicked. In fact, she once said to me, ‘You’ve already done a photo book on me, haven’t you had enough?’ But I kept telling her that I wanted to and she eventually said, ‘Let me do my prayer and I shall let you know’ to which I promptly replied, ‘Mother, I have done my prayer and the answer is yes’ which was when she granted me the permission to photograph her,” this is how legendary photo-journalist Raghu Rai describes the beginning of his four-decade long journey documentin­g some of the most moving images of Saint Teresa.

Through his fourth book on Saint Teresa, titled Saint Teresa of Calcutta: A Celebratio­n of her Life and Legacy, Rai says his journey with her has come to a fruition. “When she passed away, I used to feel my journey with Mother is not yet complete. Because I was a man, I couldn’t enter the Missionari­es of Charity and I couldn’t go everywhere or speak to everyone in there. And, also because I wasn’t a Christian, there were many things I couldn’t do and comprehend. But sometime back, I got a letter from a senior Sister from the Missionary asking if I would like to go to Vatican for the canonisati­on. How could I have said no to that? I had no plan to go there, but when I got the letter, it felt like a bulawa for me. When I came back and decided to publish this book, it was then that I felt my journey with Mother had come to a fulfilling completion,” shares the Padma Shri awardee who has photograph­ed some of the most iconic moments and people in Indian history.

The book includes photograph­s of her canonisati­on in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican City, along with pictures of her life and work shot right from the ’70s and the life at the Missionari­es of Charity in Kolkata after her death.

“Right when I did my third book in 2003, I titled it Saint Mother and my publisher questioned me as to why I was calling her a saint. I had realised by that time that she was a living saint and it took the Vatican another decade to realise it,” the photograph­er says with a hearty laugh, adding that Saint Teresa’s dedication and commitment has had a great influence on him as a person.

It was not an easy task photograph­ing her, Rai admits. “Each time I wanted to click photograph­s, I had to convince her and prove to her that I had a purpose there. And when trying to capture such a powerful person, you need to try to capture the energy in the form of emotions and feelings. Only if your pictures have them can you preserve the moments. One day, I went to her to show the published book and she said ‘Oh! The book is out! Very good’ upon turning few pages and passed it to a Sister and said ‘keep it’. For her, the photograph­s or what one thought of them didn’t matter,” he recollects.

As his next project, Rai will be bringing out a book by the end of this year on Dalai Lama, who he has been photograph­ing for the past 15 years. “He’s someone who’s my very favourite and is very close to my heart.”

SAINT TERESA OF CALCUTTA: A CELEBRATIO­N OF HER LIFE AND LEGACY by RAGHU RAI `1,499, pp 148 Aleph Book Right when I did my third book in 2003, I titled it Saint Mother and my publisher questioned me as to why I was calling her a saint. I had realised by that time that she was a living saint and it took the Vatican another decade to realise it

— RAGHU RAI, photo-journalist

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 ??  ?? PICTURES FROM THE BOOK SAINT TERESA OF CALCUTTA: A CELEBRATIO­N OF HER LIFE AND LEGACY
PICTURES FROM THE BOOK SAINT TERESA OF CALCUTTA: A CELEBRATIO­N OF HER LIFE AND LEGACY
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