MOTHER TERESA DECLARED A SAINT
BEFORE HUGE CROWDS IN THE VATICAN
Mother
Teresa, a Catholic nun who devoted her life to helping India's poor, has been
declared a saint in a canonization Mass held by Pope Francis in the Vatican.Pope Francis
delivered the formula for the canonization of the Albanian-born nun -- known as
the "saint of the gutters" -- before huge crowds of pilgrims gathered
in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on Sunday morning.Applause broke out
before he completed the formula of canonization, in which he declared
"Blessed Teresa of Calcutta to be a saint."India renamed the city of
Calcutta to Kolkata in 2001 to match the Bengali pronunciation. But the church
uses the spelling of Calcutta in its references to Mother Teresa.
St
Peter's Square at canonisation of Mother Teresa
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Speaking in Latin,
Francis said that "after due deliberation and frequent prayer for divine
assistance, and having sought the counsel of many of our brother bishops, we
declare and define Blessed Teresa of Calcutta to be a saint, and we enroll her
among the saints, decreeing that she is to be venerated as such by the whole
church."Catholics -- including hundreds of
blue- and white-robed nuns from the Missionaries of Charity sisterhood founded
by Mother Teresa -- had gathered from around the world to attend the
canonization of the church's newest saint, just 19 years after her death.A huge
portrait of Mother Teresa, whom the church credits with having performed two
miraculous cures of the sick, hung from St. Peter's Basilica during the
colorful ceremony.
Pope Francis then delivered a homily, in which he praised Mother
Teresa -- "this emblematic figure of womanhood and of consecrated
life" -- for her charitable work."Mother Teresa, in all aspects of
her life, was a generous dispenser of divine mercy, making herself available
for everyone through her welcome and defense of human life, those unborn and
those abandoned and discarded," he said."She bowed down before those
who were spent, left to die on the side of the road, seeing in them their
God-given dignity. She made her voice heard before the powers of this world, so
that they might recognize their guilt for the crime of poverty they
created."For the newly-sainted Teresa, he said, "mercy was the salt
which gave flavor to her work, it was the light which shone in the darkness of
the many who no longer had tears to shed for their poverty and suffering."She
was an example to volunteers around the world, he said. "May she be your
model of holiness."In a departure from his scripted remarks, he noted that
people "may struggle" to refer to her as "Saint Teresa."
"With great spontaneity, I think we will continue to call her Mother
Teresa," he said.
Prayers were then delivered in a number of languages, including
Albanian, Mother Teresa's native tongue, and Bengali, the language of Kolkata,
where a special Mass was celebrated at the Missionaries of Charity Sunday. A
prayer was delivered in Chinese for persecuted Christians around the world.About
1,500 homeless people from across Italy were bused into the Vatican to be given
seats of honor at the Mass -- and be served a pizza lunch by nuns afterward.Most
of the Catholic Church's saints or blessed people are honored decades, if not
centuries, after their deaths. Traditionally, there is a mandatory five-year
waiting period before formal evaluation of a candidate for beatification can
begin.
Mother Teresa's devotees began pressing the Vatican soon after
her death to speed up the nun's sainthood cause, saying her holiness was clear
to many around the world. Pope John Paul II granted the special dispensation in
1999, and the procedure began.The pope waived the waiting period in part, some
believe, because of her fame and reputation.John Paul II further paved the way
for her beatification in 2002, when he approved a miracle attributed to Mother
Teresa after her death.The approved miracle involved Monica Besra, a 30-year-old Kolkata woman who said praying to the nun cured a
stomach tumor. The Vatican committee said in October 2002 that it could find no
"scientific explanation" for the woman's recovery."I took
doctors' medicines, threw up and was in a lot of pain. But when I prayed to
Mother Teresa from my heart, Mother Teresa blessed me and now I am
healthy," Besra told CNN last week."My entire village and I am very
happy that she is being made a saint."
Pope Francis formally announced that Mother Teresa would be
declared a saint in March 2016, when he recognized a second
miracle attributed to her.A Brazilian man with multiple brain
tumors was healed after loved ones prayed to Mother Teresa to heal him, according to Avvenire, a newspaper
affiliated to the Catholic Church.Born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu in 1910, Mother
Teresa set up her Missionaries of Charity in the slums of Kolkata in 1950 and
made her headquarters in the Indian city for nearly half a century.
Earning global recognition for her unending work and compassion
for the poor, Mother Teresa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.The
Norwegian Nobel Committee said her spirit and the respect she had for the worth
and dignity of human beings inspired constructive efforts to do away with
hunger and poverty. The nuns and priests from the Missionaries of Charity
continue her work around the world, including some ex-communist countries where
she was banned. Her order has offices in Europe, Africa, the Americas and
Australia, as well as Hong Kong and Russia.A group of nuns will travel to the
Vatican for the canonization ceremony, and those who remain in Kolkata will
mark the day with prayers of thanks.
A few
minutes past 2 p.m. on Sunday, thousands gathered at Mother House in Kolkata
erupted in joy the very moment Pope Francis declared Mother Teresa a Saint at
the Vatican.Clapping, loud cheers and sounds of bells rent the air around the
three-storied house in heart of the city. All roads in the city led to the
house on 54 A, A.J.C. Bose Road popularly called Mother House, the headquarters
of Missionaries of Charity, which was all decked up for the event.Hundreds of
her followers made a beeline to the Mother House and offered prayers, bowing
around and by touching her grave. By the afternoon when the canonisation
ceremony started, the tomb was covered with blue and white flowers.
Besides
the tomb a photograph of Mother Teresa with a message “Saint Teresa of Kolkata,
Pray for Us’' also attracted visitors and the nuns of the Missionaries of
Kolkata in the blue and white sarees alike. The live streaming of the
canonisation ceremony from Rome was telecasted on two giant screens at Mother
Teresa. Photographs of Mother Teresa adorned her the walls of the room as
people sat on benches floors watching silently the ceremony’s telecast.A huge
flex of Mother Teresa like the one hung from the balcony in Vatican was also
put up inside the Mother House. The photograph has a halo around Mother
Teresa’s face something which only a Saint can have, a nun explained .Outside
Mother House, an event was organised by the Kolkata Municipal Corporation.
Speaking at the event Sister Lysa, assistant-general of Missionaries of Charity
emphasised the inseparable connection between Mother Teresa and Kolkata.
Throughout her Life Mother worked on A.J.C. Bose road giving humble love and
service to unwanted, to the orphans, to the sick dying and leprosy patients,
she said.“Her path of holiness was very simple within the reach of every
ordinary person,” Sister Lysa, said, praying to Saint Teresa of Kolkata “ to
bless all of us”.
Prof. John Kurakar
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