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Mother Teresa: early sainthood in doubt
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By
IOL
South Asia
Correspondent
NEW DELHI
, October 11 (IslamOnline) - It may take the “Saint of the
Gutters,” Mother Teresa of the Sisters of Charity, longer to attain
sainthood than was hoped till this week.
The
Vatican
had recently beatified the Albanian nun who served the sick and dying
in the slums of Kolkata with extraordinary devotion. Born Gonxha
Bojaxhin in
Skopje
in 1910, Mother Teresa had made
India
her home and taken Indian nationality.
Respected
worldwide as an epitome of Jesus Christ’s teachings, she was adored
by millions of Indians. Mother Teresa was beatified on papal authority
earlier this month when a team of doctors told the
Vatican
's Congregation for the Causes of Saints that there was no medical
explanation for the healing of a 30-year- old Indian, Monica Besra.
Besra,
who had been suffering from stomach tumor, had claimed her tumor
disappeared when she put Mother Teresa’s photograph on her stomach.
This “miracle” led to Mother Teresa’s beatification. She needs
another such miracle to be a saint. Mother Teresa died in 1997.
However,
no sooner than the
Vatican
announced the decision to beatify her, a great controversy raged about
the reality of the miracle claim. Doctors who treated Besra for tumor
said she was cured because of a long course of medication rather than
as the result of a miracle.
Besra
is a tribal woman from the eastern state of
West Bengal
bordering
Bangladesh
. West Bengal Health Minister Surya Kanta Mishra said Besra was
treated for her tumor at a government hospital. “Besra received
medication at the Balurghat hospital and recovered after treatment.
This was no miracle,” he asserted.
Nuns
of the Sisters of Charity, the order Mother Teresa founded, have come
under a cloud for making a false claim, although this does not reflect
on the formidable reputation of the “Mother” herself.
A
prominent rationalist of
India
, who has been discrediting Hindu "divines" on a regular
basis, exposing their “miracles” as sleight of hand, said the
miracle claimed for Mother Teresa was false. The rationalist, Prabir
Ghosh, said, however, that she still remained a saint for the selfless
service she did to the poor, the sick and dying for decades.
“Many
doctors have reported to the
West Bengal
government that Besra continued to receive treatment long after Mother
Teresa died,” he said.
Ghosh,
who said the great woman was a “saint” in any case, stressed “it
would be an insult to her good work done among the poorest of the poor
in Kolkata if sainthood is bestowed on her on false claims of
miracles.”
Ghosh’s
organization, Indian Rationalist and Scientific Thinking Association,
would press the
West Bengal
state government to take legal action against Sisters of Charity for
misleading people.
Given
the penchant for miracles in the
Third World
, it is very likely that some people – instead of resorting to
proper medication – would stop taking drugs and invoke Mother Teresa
to heal them. Already some people have expressed such fears.
Government
officials have of late visited Besra to interview her on the truth of
the claims. The Sisters of Charity are keeping quiet.
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