Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

As sainthood looms critics question Mother Teresa's legacy

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Pope Francis approved the canonizati­on of the widely beloved Roman Catholic nun last December, nearly two decades after she died in Kolkata, in whose teeming slums she devoted her life to helping the destitute and the sick

KOLKATA, AFP, Saturday -As the Vatican prepares to declare Mother Teresa a saint on Sunday, in the Indian city where she rose to fame, claims of medical negligence and financial mismanagem­ent at her care homes threaten to cloud her legacy.

Pope Francis approved the canonizati­on of the widely beloved Roman Catholic nun last December, nearly two decades after she died in Kolkata, in whose teeming slums she devoted her life to helping the destitute and the sick.

Yet criticisms of the soon-to-be Saint Teresa of Kolkata abound, with doctors and former volunteers recounting grim tales of poor sanitation, medical neglect and forced conversion­s of the dying.

Born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu to Albanian parents in what is now Macedonia, her Missionari­es of Charity homes for the dying earned her a Nobel Peace Prize and the sobriquet Saint of the Gutters.

“We feel that Mother Teresa's elevation to sainthood would be a renewed thrust to (her) charitable works,” Thomas D'Souza, the Archbishop of Kolkata, told AFP.

Like millions of Catholics worldwide, Gautam Lewis is excited to celebrate the canonizati­on of the woman he calls his “second mother”, who rescued the orphan after he was struck with polio aged two.

“Mother Teresa used to carry me to church every Sunday and she personally supervised my treatment when I underwent surgeries and rehabilita­tion to get rid of polio,” Lewis, now a pilot in London, told AFP.

“I remember feeling very safe and secure in her presence,” said the 39-year-old, in Kolkata for celebratio­ns of the nun.

Already considered a living saint by many, the humanitari­an's path to canonisati­on was sealed after the Vatican last year recognised the second of the two required miracles, following her death.

A critically ill Bengali tribal woman and a Brazilian man suffering from multiple brain tumours both credited prayers to the deceased nun with saving their lives.

But Aroup Chatterjee, a British doctor born in the city formerly known as Calcutta, said that “her whole emphasis was propagatio­n of her faith at any cost.” “To convert a dying, unconsciou­s person is very, very low behaviour, very disgusting,” the 58-year-old author of a controvers­ial 2003 book on the nun said.

One of Mother Teresa's most vocal critics, the late British-born author Christophe­r Hitchens, accused her of exacerbati­ng the plight of the poor with her staunch opposition to contracept­ion and abortion.

The famous atheist, who made a provocativ­e film about the nun called Hell's Angel in 1994, said she denied basic care to patients out of a belief that suffering brought them closer to God.

“I think it is very beautiful for the poor to accept their lot, to share it with the passion of Christ,” Hitchens quoted her as saying in 1981, in his book The Missionary Position.

Some former volunteers say her order glorifies pain and poverty and accuse it of delivering bare-bones care, despite receiving millions of dollars in donations.

Hemley Gonzalez, who started his own NGO in Kolkata as a response to the alleged deficienci­es he witnessed when volunteeri­ng at Missionari­es of Charity eight years ago, calls it “a modern-day cult”.

Nuns washed needles with tap water before reusing them, he said, and scolded him for giving terminal patients haircuts because they were going to die anyway.

“Right under the eyes of everyone... they're getting away with medical negligence,” Gonzalez said. Missionari­es of Charity has vastly expanded since Mother Teresa's death, and now has 758 centres in 139 countries staffed by more than 5,000 nuns.

Yet the order remains opaque, declining to publish its funding sources or accounts, a stance which has elicited suspicion over its management of allegedly vast sums.

 ??  ?? A photo taken on April 14, 2016 shows a statue of Mother Teresa, the nun who spent most of her life caring for the sick and the poor in India, placed in Qafe Thane, near the Macedonian border. (AFP)
A photo taken on April 14, 2016 shows a statue of Mother Teresa, the nun who spent most of her life caring for the sick and the poor in India, placed in Qafe Thane, near the Macedonian border. (AFP)

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