10 years later, Mother Teresa remembered

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-09-05 17:38


Volunteers, slum dwellers and nuns from the the order of the Missionaries of Charity gather besides the tomb of Mother Teresa for a special prayer during the tenth anniversary of Teresa's death in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata September 5, 2007. Mother Teresa was a Nobel Peace Prize-winning nun who died in 1997, and was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 2003 at the Vatican. [Reuters]

CALCUTTA, India -- Devotees held Roman Catholic Masses, candle processions and interfaith prayers Wednesday to mark the 10th anniversary of the death of Mother Teresa, who dedicated her life to serving the poorest of the poor in this eastern Indian city.

Calcutta's Archbishop Lucas Sirkar led an early morning Mass attended by nuns and volunteers at Mother House, the headquarters of the Missionaries of Charity order she founded in 1950.

Carrying strings of rosary beads, her supporters followed the prayers with candlelight processions at clinics and schools that Mother Teresa opened in Calcutta's slums and ramshackle poor neighborhoods during her nearly seven decades in India.

An interfaith prayer session was also organized in the city by Calcutta's All India Minorities Forum.

Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother Teresa, whose supporters hope to see made a saint, came to Calcutta in 1929 as Sister Teresa after she said she heard a call from God to serve "the poorest of the poor." She set up schools for street children and medical clinics for slum-dwellers in this overwhelmingly Hindu country where Christians account for a mere 2.4 percent of 1.1 billion people.

When she died on Sept. 5, 1997, at 87, her Missionaries of Charity had nearly 4,000 nuns and ran roughly 600 orphanages, soup kitchens, homeless shelters and clinics around the world.

Mother Teresa was not beloved by all. She was criticized for taking donations from Haitian leader Jean Claude Duvalier and disgraced American financier Charles Keating. Detractors opposed her stance against birth-control use in Calcutta's slums.

More recently, a new collection of her writings reveals that she at times doubted her faith.

"Come Be My Light: The Private Writings of the 'Saint of Calcutta,'" which was released Tuesday, recounts Mother Teresa's anguish over the crisis of faith, and the pain she felt over her separation from God. Some writings indicate that, at times, she may have doubted the existence of God.

But inside her community, there has been no public sign of disappointment over Mother Teresa's spiritual struggles. And although after her death, there were concerns that the Missionaries of Charity would flounder, the past decade has seen it expand into new countries and open new clinics.

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