Culled from
Patheos.com:
In all the universe of religious experience, few figures are so beloved as the Catholic nun known to the world as Mother Teresa. The official biography holds that she selflessly devoted her life to ministering to the poorest of the poor in the slums of Calcutta, suffering through poverty and deprivation nearly as great as that of her patients without complaint, and asking no reward except the knowledge of doing God’s will. She was a beloved figure to millions and a trusted counselor to powerful leaders and celebrities worldwide, was showered with rewards and honors during her life, and attracted huge crowds as she lay in state after her death.As I said, that is the official story. But atheists and freethinkers, more than any other group, should recognize how pious words are so often used to conceal ugly acts of inhumanity, and to gloss over the disreputable elements of stories presented as inspirational and noble. Teresa’s story is perhaps the supreme example of this. In this post, I intend to look past all the uncritical praise and point out some unsettling facts about her life and her mission that devotional biographies tend to avoid.
Teresa was a friend to
vicious dictators, criminals and con men. As Christopher Hitchens documents in
his book The Missionary Position, Teresa was acquainted with a startling number
of unsavory characters. Two such were the Duvaliers, Jean-Claude and Michelle,
who ruled Haiti as a police state from 1971 until they were overthrown in a
popular uprising in 1986. (They looted the country of most of its national
treasury when they fled.) Teresa visited them in person in 1981 and praised the
Duvaliers and their regime as “friends” of the poor, and her testimony on their
behalf was shown on state-owned television for weeks. Bizarrely, she also
visited the grave of brutal Communist dictator Enver Hoxha in 1990, laying a
wreath of flowers on the tomb of a man who had viciously suppressed religion in
Teresa’s native Albania. The list also includes the Nicaraguan contras, a
Catholic terrorist group who unleashed death squads on the civilian population
in their bid to conquer the country.
Teresa was also a
friend to Charles Keating, a conservative Catholic fundamentalist who served on
an anti-pornography commission under President Nixon. Keating would later
become infamous for his role in the Savings & Loan scandal, where he was
convicted of fraud, racketeering and conspiracy for his involvement in a scam
where customers were deceived into buying worthless junk bonds, resulting in many
of them losing their life savings. Keating had donated $1.25 million to Mother
Teresa in the 1980s, and as he was awaiting sentencing, she wrote a letter to
the court on his behalf asking for clemency.
The prosecuting
attorney, Paul Turley, wrote a reply to this letter. In his reply, he explained
what Keating had been convicted of, and observed, “No church… should allow
itself to be used as salve for the conscience of the criminal.” He also pointed
out that the $1.25 million Keating had donated to her was stolen money, and
suggested that the appropriate course of action would be for her to give it
back: “You have been given money by Mr. Keating that he has been convicted of
stealing by fraud. Do not permit him the ‘indulgence’ he desires. Do not keep
the money. Return it to those who worked for it and earned it!”
Teresa never replied to
this letter.
Teresa cloaked a
reactionary right-wing political outlook in false protestations of innocence
and naivete. Although she insisted on several occasions that her mission was
resolutely apolitical, Teresa’s true interests were anything but. Like the
right-wing conservative Catholic she was, she traveled the world to lobby
against the legality of abortion, contraception, and even divorce.
When the International
Health Organization honored Teresa in 1989, she spoke at length against
abortion and contraception and called AIDS a “just retribution for improper
sexual conduct”. Similarly, when Teresa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in
1979, she proclaimed in her acceptance speech that abortion was the greatest
threat to peace in the world. (Hitchens cuttingly notes that when the award was
announced, “few people had the poor taste to ask what she had ever done, or
even claimed to do, for the cause of peace”). In 1992, she appeared at an
open-air Mass in Ireland and said, “Let us promise Our Lady who loves Ireland
so much that we will never allow in this country a single abortion. And no
contraceptives.” She also campaigned in Ireland to oppose the successful 1995
referendum to legalize divorce in that predominantly Catholic country.
The connection between
overpopulation and poverty seemed never to occur to Teresa, who said on another
occasion that she was not concerned about it because “God always provides”.
(The very existence of her mission would seem to cast doubt on that.) In
upholding the irrational dogmas of Catholicism, she failed to recognize – or
perhaps chose to disregard – the obvious conclusion that inadequate access to
family planning services was and is one of the greatest causes of human
destitution.
Teresa’s free clinics
provided care that was at best rudimentary and haphazard and at worst
unsanitary and dangerous, despite the enormous amounts of donations she
received. Multiple volunteers at Teresa’s clinics, such as Mary Loudon and
Susan Shields, have testified to the inadequate care provided to the dying.
Despite routinely receiving millions of dollars in donations, Teresa
deliberately kept her clinics barren and austere, lacking all but the most
rudimentary and haphazard care.
Volunteers such as
Loudon, and Western doctors such as Robin Fox of the Lancet, wrote with shock
of what they found in Teresa’s clinics. No tests were performed to determine
the patients’ ailments. No modern medical equipment was available. Even people
dying of cancer, suffering terrible agony, were given no painkillers other than
aspirin. Needles were rinsed and reused, without proper sterilization. No one
was ever sent to the hospital, even people in clear need of emergency surgery or
other treatment.
Again, it is important
to note that these conditions were not the unavoidable result of triage.
Teresa’s organization routinely received multimillion-dollar donations which
were squirreled away in bank accounts, while volunteers were told to beg donors
for more money and plead extreme poverty and desperate need. The money she
received could easily have built half a dozen fully equipped modern hospitals
and clinics, but was never used for that purpose. No, this negligent and
rudimentary care was deliberate – about which, see the next point. However,
despite her praise for poverty, Teresa hypocritically sought out the most
advanced care possible in the Western world when she herself was in need of it.
Teresa considered
converting the sick and the poor to be a higher priority than providing for
their actual needs, and believed that human suffering was beneficial and even
“beautiful”. The following quote from Teresa says it all:
“I think it is very beautiful for the poor
to accept their lot, to share it with the passion of Christ. I think the world
is being much helped by the suffering of the poor people.”
On another occasion,
Teresa told a terminal cancer patient, who was dying in extreme pain, that he
should consider himself fortunate: “You are suffering like Christ on the cross.
So Jesus must be kissing you.” (She freely related his reply, which she seemed
not to realize was meant as a putdown: “Then please tell him to stop kissing
me.”)
Despite the widespread
perception that Teresa sought to relieve the suffering of the poor, the truth
was anything but. As Hitchens documents, she actually considered suffering to
be beneficial. This is why she kept her clinics so rudimentary – not so that
sick people could be cured, but so they could get closer to God through their
suffering. As critics like Michael Hakeem put it: “Mother Teresa is thoroughly
saturated with a primitive fundamentalist religious worldview that sees pain,
hardship, and suffering as ennobling experiences and a beautiful expression of
affiliation with Jesus Christ and his ordeal on the cross.” To her mind, they
were not evils to be relieved, but blessings to be glorified.
But, of course,
suffering like Christ was of no benefit if the sufferer did not actually accept
Christ. To this end, Teresa’s clinics were run as conversion factories.
Ex-volunteers have testified that Teresa taught her followers to secretly
baptize the dying – people who could not resist, or were not aware of what was
happening to them – without their consent. As ex-volunteer Susan Shields wrote,
“Material aid was a means of reaching their souls, of showing the poor that God
loved them… Secrecy was important so that it would not come to be known that
Mother Teresa’s sisters were baptizing Hindus and Moslems”.
It seems that Teresa’s
true ambition was to found a Catholic religious order on a par with the
Franciscans and the Benedictines. (Her Nobel prize money was used to this end.)
She may well get her wish; her Missionaries of Charity organization numbers as
many as 4,000 nuns and 40,000 lay workers. If she wished to create a convent
whose mission is to glorify human suffering, then it is for Catholics to decide
whether they want to support that mission. Secularists and humanists, however,
should rethink whether we want to support an effort that is so manifestly at
odds with all that we stand for.
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