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WHY MOTHER TERESA SHOULD NOT BE A SAINT
#1

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/allnews/page....017&method=full


By Christopher Hitchens


In the good old/bad old days, the procedure for making a former human being into a saint was well understood.


There had to be an interval of at least seven years after the death before beatification - the first stage in the process - could even be proposed. (This was to insure against any gusts of popular enthusiasm for a local figure who might later prove to be a phoney.)


There had to be proof of two miracles, attributable to the intercession of the deceased.


And there had to be a hearing, at which the advocatus Diaboli, or Devil's Advocate, would be appointed by the Church to make the strongest possible case against the nominee.


I am not a Roman Catholic and the saint-making procedures of the Vatican are really none of my business. But it strikes me as odd that none of the above rules have been followed in the case of the newly-beatified woman who called herself "Mother" Teresa of Calcutta.


She was first put forward for beatification only four years after her death. Only one miracle has been required of her, and duly found to have been performed.


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And, instead of appointing a Devil's Advocate, the Vatican invited me to be a witness for the Evil One, and expected me to do the job pro bono.


Their reason for asking was that I made a documentary called Hell's Angel, and wrote a short book entitled The Missionary Position, in which I reviewed Mother Teresa's career as if she had been an ordinary person.


<b>I discovered that she had taken money from rich dictators like the Duvalier gang in Haiti, had been a friend of poverty rather than a friend of the poor, had never given any account of the huge sums of money donated to her, had railed against birth-control in the most overpopulated city on the planet and had been the spokeswoman for the most extreme dogmas of religious fundamentalism.</b>



Actually, it's boasting to say that I "discovered" any of this. It was all there in plain sight for anyone to notice. But in the age of celebrity, nobody had troubled to ask if such a global reputation was truly earned or was simply the result of brilliant public relations.


"Wait a minute," said a TV host in Washington a few nights ago, when I debated all this with Mr John Donahue of the Catholic Defence League. "She built hospitals." No, sir, you wait a minute.


Mother Teresa was given, to our certain knowledge, many tens of millions of pounds. But she never built any hospitals. She claimed to have built almost 150 convents, for nuns joining her own order, in several countries. Was this where ordinary donors thought their money was going?


Furthermore, she received some of this money from the Duvaliers, and from Mr Charles Keating of the notorious Lincoln Savings and Loan of California, and both these sources had acquired the money by - how shall I put it? - borrowing money from the poor and failing to give it back.


How could this possibly be true? Doesn't everyone know that she spent her time kissing the sores of lepers and healing the sick? Ah, but what everyone knows isn't always true. You were more likely to run into Mother Teresa being photographed with Nancy Reagan, or posing with Princess Diana, or in the first-class cabin of Air India (where she had a permanent reservation).


You could see her in Ireland, campaigning against a law which would permit civil divorce and remarriage (though she publicly defended Princess Diana's right to be divorced).


You could encounter her on the podium in Stockholm, accepting yet another huge cheque and telling the Nobel audience that the greatest threat to world peace was... abortion. (Since she added that contraception was morally as bad as abortion, she essentially held the view that condoms and coils were a deadly threat to world peace. The Church does not insist on that degree of fundamentalism.)


And when she got sick, she would check herself into the Mayo Clinic or some other temple of American medicine. As one who has visited her primitive "hospice" for the dying in Calcutta, I should call that a wise decision. Nobody would go there except to check out, in one way or another.


"Give a man a reputation as an early riser," said Mark Twain "and that man can sleep till noon." Give a woman a reputation for holiness and compassion and apparently nothing she does can cause her to lose it.


Of Albanian descent and a keen nationalist, she visited the country when it was still a brutal dictatorship and "the world's first atheist state" to pay tribute to its grim Stalinist leader.


She fawned upon her shrewd protector Indira Gandhi at a time when the Indian government was imposing forced sterilisations. Above all, she urged the poor to think of their sufferings as a gift from God.


And she opposed the only thing that has ever been known to cure poverty - the empowerment of women in poor countries by giving them some say in their own reproduction.


Now, so they tell us, a woman in Bengal has recovered from a tumour after praying to Mother Teresa. I have received information from both the family and the physicians that says it was good medical treatment that did the job. Who knows?


I must say that I don't believe in miracles but if they do exist there are deserving cases which don't, in spite of fervent prayers, ever benefit from them.


When Mr Donahue was asked if he believed the statutory second miracle would occur, he said that he thought it would. I said that I thought so, too.


But I have already seen a collective hallucination occur as regards Mother Teresa, though it was produced by the less supernatural methods of modern, uncritical mass media.

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#2

I will post this excerpt from another article and pls do read the rest:


http://macintyre.com/content/view/530/105/


On Aug 1st British television carried an investigative piece by Donald McIntyre about the treatment of children in an orphanage run by Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity. He quotes Dr Aroup Chatterjee, a medical doctor in London and the author of Mother Teresa: The Final Verdict, as saying that "the Indian government is "terrified" of her reputation but if similar practices were found in any other home, it would have been shut down."


In brief, the report said that handicapped children were maltreated in the orphanage. No surprise there for anyone who has cared to read what the true story is behind the façade that Mother Teresa carefully built around her mission. She used the misery that is all too evident in Calcutta (and in India in general) to demand charity from all and sundry around the world.<b> What she did with the donations is not clear and is unlikely to ever become clear because she refused to have her books audited. Untold millions of dollars flowed into her coffers .</b>
The money was not used to build even one small hospital anywhere. In her homes, it was even forbidden to hand out simple painkillers. She, in the meanwhile, got jetted around to hospitals in the US whenever she was suffering some illness.

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#3

Bismillah


Truth Sayer Is Allah:


"O you who believe! Verily, there are many of the (Jewish) rabbis and the (Christian) monks who devour the wealth of humankind in falsehood, and hinder (them) from the Way of Allah (i.e. Allah's Religion of Islamic Monotheism). And those who hoard up gold and silver [and other wealth], and spend it not in the Way of Allah, -announce unto them a painful torment."


(Quran 9:34)

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#4

Quote:Bismillah


Truth Sayer Is Allah:


"O you who believe! Verily, there are many of the (Jewish) rabbis and the (Christian) monks who devour the wealth of humankind in falsehood, and hinder (them) from the Way of Allah (i.e. Allah's Religion of Islamic Monotheism). And those who hoard up gold and silver [and other wealth], and spend it not in the Way of Allah, -announce unto them a painful torment."


(Quran 9:34)

Ah, not all is at it seems, is it? That is disappointing to hear, about Teresa. I have never really agreed with the Catholic ideal of sainthood myself anyway, but history records her as a wonderful person.


It is lucky all of this history is recent, or it may have disappeared or been hidden since it happened. Such is often the case with matters of history far in the past... who can ever be sure of the truth of events already finished?


It is always unfortunate when a person with a good idea feels the need to take that idea to a fanatical extent - fanaticism leaves no room for reason, but is always fervently supported by some group of people, who will make any excuse to justify the actions of their beloved leaders.


The story of Teresa should be a reminder to all, then - Beware of those with great intentions, and do not follow any leader blindly.


Namaste


Mahasvapna

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#5

But how much of that was MT, and how much was it the people that surrounded her?


She was their meal ticket, so when she got ill, they where bound to want to protect 'their' investment :angry2:

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#6

Bismillah


Belated reply Arclight, but well, Sobhan Allah the source is non Islamic, I guess, this lends it credibility to any non Muslim. I mean it is not us who digged this info out.

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#7

Salam Muslimah,


I have the utmost respect for you, but when you post such articles I just shake my head in shock horror. From where I sit, it reflects you more than the reporter.


It's hilarious how Muslims encourage non-Muslims to disregard the media's portrayal of Islam, yet, when the tables are turned, Muslims become completely gullible to the false trash written about other religions & their holy figures.


The irony!


May God have mercy on us all & may the world be blessed with many more humanitarians like Mother Teresa.


......... Mother Teresa, please pray for us to the Lord, Our God.

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#8

Bismillah




Quote:Mother Teresa, please pray for us to the Lord, Our God.

She is dead, and she is just a human being, she can do nothing for herself nor to u.


Peace

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#9

In the Name of the Father & of the Son & of the Holy Spirit. Amen.




Quote:She is dead, and she is just a human being, she can do nothing for herself nor to u.


Peace

Whoa! Don't hold back radiyah. Tell me how you really feel :punch:


There's nothing wrong with asking another human being to pray for us.


& I assure you she's more alive than you & I are :)


Peace to you too!

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#10

Quote:There's nothing wrong with asking another human being to pray for us.


& I assure you she's more alive than you & I are :)

Hi FHC,


I wish you will think and seriously reflect on what you have said, not for anybody's sake but for your own. Nobody knows who is better or worse than another, living or dead, besides our creator. Only Allah knows who are the rightoeus among his servants. We cannot logically give elevated status to any individual based on something only our creator knows. We have to leave the hearts and souls to Allah to judge, this is not our right.


Therefore, it is not going to benefit any person to invoke the dead to pray on ones behalf. The dead are in their graves waiting their judgement, but thanks to God you are still alive, and if you call on God, he will listen. In short, if you like to ask for mercy, guidance, or forgiveness, you should ask to no one but the one who can grant it to you.


I really feel like the commandment most frequently violated is the first commandment.


Thanks for listening,


May Allah guide us all to the right path and help us to become better human beings, Ameen.


Love, Jennifer

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