An interview with Mother Teresa
Mother Teresa's autographed visiting card to Anto Akkara.-RV |
Who
is Mother Teresa of Calcutta? Well Mother Teresa herself gave her identity:
"By blood, I am Albanian. By citizenship, an Indian. By faith, I am a
Catholic nun. As to my calling, I belong to the world. As to my heart, I belong
entirely to the Heart of Jesus." On Sept. 4, 2016, Mother Teresa
will be officially proclaimed a saint by Pope Francis at a canonization Mass in
St. Peter’s Square in Rome. Even before this ceremony, she has been
acclaimed a saint not just by Christians, but many others of other faiths.
Born
Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu
of Albanian parents on August
26, 1910, in Skopje, in what
is Macedonia today, Mother
Teresa came to eastern India’s Kolkata city, formerly Calcutta, in 1929, as a missionary of
the Sisters of Loreto. Later, in what she described as a ‘call within a
call’, she founded her
Missionaries of Charity congregation in 1950 to serve Jesus in the distressing
disguise of the poorest of the poor. She obtained Indian citizenship
the following year. Mother Teresa earned 124 national as well as
international honours for her works of mercy, including the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.
She died on September 5, 1997
at the age of 87 and
St. John Paul II declared her Blessed
in the Vatican, on October 19, 2003.
Mother
Teresa often accepted invitations to talk, as they would offer her an
opportunity to draw the world’s
attention on the poor and needy. Here’s
one such interview where she talked Anto Akkara, an Indian rights advocate and
journalist with international media. Mother Teresa spoke to Anto
Akkara on November 17, 1995 at the Missionaries of Charity’s ‘Nirmala Sishu
Bhavan’ centre in New Delhi. Below is a transcript of the interview.
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Anto
Akkara: Mother, what is your mother tongue?
Mother
Teresa: Albanian. But, I am equally fluent in Bengali (language of Calcutta)
and English.
AA:
Right now what do you feel: Are you an Indian or Albanian?
MT:
I am everything. Every country I love and I am a child of God to love the
humans.
AA:
So, you have no nationality?
MT:
I have a diplomatic passport for India, diplomatic passport for Albania. I have
Vatican passport and to America, I can go any time. Every time I ask for visa,
they (USA) give me visa for five years. I have never had any problem in
getting a visa to any nation.
AA:
When you started your Congregation, did you ever think that it would grow as it
is today?
MT:
Oh, that everybody
knows. We are now in 126 countries. We have 561 houses - tabernacles we call
them - and over 4600 nuns. It's simply to serve
the poorest of the poor. We are wanted and we have championed those who have
nothing, the deprived children of God.
(Today,
MCs are in 139 countries with 758 'Tabernacles' and 5160 nuns)
AA:
What is the motive of all your work? Is it the fundamentalist religious motive
as critics say?
MT:
Jesus has very clearly said
in the gospel. "Whatever you do, do to the least of my brethren."
Clear? That was the work of Jesus. Again, Jesus has said "Come, blessed of
my Father, take the seat in the kingdom prepared for you, because I was hungry
you gave me food, I was thirsty you have me drink, I was naked you clothed me,
I was homeless you took me home and I was sick you visited me." And we are
just doing that. Brothers, Fathers and Sisters - all of us in the Missionaries
of Charity are doing the same. All of us have been created by God to love and
to be loved. We are involved in this work. When you do that, there is joy,
unity and love.
AA:
There are allegations that you receive funds and awards from persons with
dubious character. Do you verify the credentials of the donors before accepting
anything?
MT:
No question of that. We
have a vow to give wholeheartedly everything to the poor. Whatever we get from
the government or other people - even one rupee we get, we give it to the poor.
Completely free service. We have no salaries. When one says he is from a
good Catholic family and says he wants to help us, why should we refuse his
offer? ...
AA:
Recently the Sankaracharya has accused that the ultimate aim of your
"manav seva" (service to mankind) is conversion. How do you answer
that?
MT:
My answer is: God
forgive them all. For they know not what they are saying.
I have told everybody that what we are doing is for the love of God and works
of love are always to accept and respect others. Works of love are always works
of peace. In our home (for the dying at Kali Ghat) in Calcutta, there is great
peace, unity and love. Many Hindu families bring food, clothing nonstop to our
home for the dying. This is an act of love. I didn't ask them. They have only
heard about what I am doing and they all come. They have to see the
beautiful work that is being done. So many people (who go to her as volunteers)
have found peace, joy and unity in their families by helping the poor. Anybody
who helps the poor is delighted. So naturally, they (critics) are not very
happy with us.
AA:
What about the charge of conversion?
MT:
Nobody can convert you
except God. Even if I want I cannot make you say sorry to God. Very less to
say, I can make one Catholic or Protestant. Nobody can change your religion
unless you want to and God gives you the grace. It's between you and God alone.
Nobody can force you. We pick up people dying full of worms from the
street. We have picked up more than 40,000 of them. If I lift up such a person,
clean him, love him and serve him, is it conversion? He has been there like an
animal in the street but I am giving him love and he dies peacefully. That
peace comes from his heart. That's between him and God. Nobody can interfere in
that. Even if I wanted, I cannot do anything. When they die, we always
send for their co-religionists. Muslims take the Muslim's body to bury it,
Hindus come and take away the dead to be cremated and Christians come and bury
their dead. I do make conversion, if conversion means really turning
people to God - to have a clean heart and to love God. That's the real
conversion.
AA:
Critics allege secret baptisms in your homes. Is it true?
MT:
No, nothing. For all
those who make such stories which are not true, I only say God forgive all
these people. I feel sorry for them because they are doing so much harm to
themselves. If a Hindu wants to find the way to God, he has the right to
go to any priest, nun or any other person. If you are Catholic, and some other
person comes to you seeking guidance, naturally you take him straight away to
someone who can show him God's love. Conversion is not only changing the faith.
Conversion is changing the heart and working over there is the grace of God.
Then only comes the question of change of faith. Nobody can force you, not even
the holy prophets.
AA:
Do you have some new fields for your Congregation to enter?
MT:
I don't think we can do
anything more than what we are doing now. We have picked up people full of
worms from the streets, cared for them and let them die in peace and love. When
they are brought to our home, they feel they are in their own homes, with their
own families. Now, I am trying to open a house for AIDS victims here (in
Delhi). The people are dying because of it.
AA:
I heard you in September telling Catholic clergy in prison ministry that
"to care for men and women in jail is to do something beautiful for
God". Are you planning to enter the prison ministry?
MT:
We are already taking
care of people from jail. Hundred and ten non-criminal women are already with us
in Shantidhan (abode of peace). And soon, 22 boys will come to us from jail.
Our Brothers will take care of them. (West Bengal state) Government has decided
that non-criminal persons should not be kept in these kind of places and asked
us to take care of them. They should live in an atmosphere of love. They need
to be loved.
AA:
You have been based in Calcutta which has been under Marxist rule for almost
two decades. Have you had any trouble from the Marxist government of West
Bengal headed by chief minister Jyoti Basu?
MT:
We never had any problem
from them. Jyoti Basu has been very kind to us. He was the one who told me
"Mother, please do something for these (jail) girls. He has been helpful
and always accessible to us over phone. We also never had any problem whenever
we wanted to meet him.
AA:
Is it true that you want to open a house in Beijing?
MT:
Yes, I went to Beijing
and we are going to open a house there by Easter.
(This
dream of Mother still remains unfulfilled)
AA:
What's your stand on abortion?
MT: I
always say "if you are afraid of them (the unborn), give them to me.
Please, don't kill them." We are fighting abortion through
adoption. In Calcutta alone, we have given more than 1,000 children in
adoption. I cannot calculate how many babies we get a year. But we never refuse
anybody. Everybody is most welcome.
AA:
Activists in the church say you are perpetrating poverty by your acts of
charity instead of trying to end it. What about trying the liberating approach
to improve the exploitative system?
MT:
How can I act in an
impersonal manner? When a man dies in the street for want of food, how can I
ignore him? When I find a starving or naked man in the street, I cannot walk
past him. I think no human being can do that. There are others who take
up that (liberating) role. I have no time to spend for that. I am busy with my
work. My path is clear. I see somebody dying, I pick him up. I find somebody
hungry, I give him food. He can love and be loved. I don't look at his color, I
don't look at his religion. I don't look at anything. Every person whether he
is Hindu, Muslim or Buddhist, he is my brother, my sister. I think we all do
like that.
END
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