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Editorial Note:
this
article was linked to by the Q&A:
Did
Mother Teresa lose her faith?
published
on September 16, 2007
The
fanatic, fraudulent Mother Theresa
Mommie
Dearest
The pope beatifies
Mother Teresa, a fanatic, a fundamentalist, and a fraud.
By Christopher
Hitchens
Posted Monday, Oct. 20, 2003,
at 4:04 PM ET
I think it was Macaulay who said that the
Roman Catholic Church deserved great credit for, and owed its longevity
to, its ability to handle and contain fanaticism. This rather oblique compliment
belongs to a more serious age. What is so striking about the "beatification"
of the woman who styled herself "Mother" Teresa is the abject surrender,
on the part of the church, to the forces of showbiz, superstition, and
populism.
It's the sheer tawdriness that strikes
the eye first of all. It used to be that a person could not even be nominated
for "beatification," the first step to "sainthood," until five years after
his or her death. This was to guard against local or popular enthusiasm
in the promotion of dubious characters. The pope nominated MT a year after
her death in 1997. It also used to be that an apparatus of inquiry was
set in train, including the scrutiny of an advocatus diaboli or "devil's
advocate," to test any extraordinary claims. The pope has abolished this
office and has created more instant saints than all his predecessors combined
as far back as the 16th century.
As for the "miracle" that had to be attested,
what can one say? Surely any respectable Catholic cringes with shame at
the obviousness of the fakery. A Bengali woman named Monica Besra claims
that a beam of light emerged from a picture of MT, which she happened to
have in her home, and relieved her of a cancerous tumor. Her physician,
Dr. Ranjan Mustafi, says that she didn't have a cancerous tumor in the
first place and that the tubercular cyst she did have was cured by a course
of prescription medicine. Was he interviewed by the Vatican's investigators?
No. (As it happens, I myself was interviewed by them but only in the most
perfunctory way. The procedure still does demand a show of consultation
with doubters, and a show of consultation was what, in this case, it got.)
According to an uncontradicted report in
the Italian paper L'Eco di Bergamo, the Vatican's secretary of state sent
a letter to senior cardinals in June, asking on behalf of the pope whether
they favored making MT a saint right away. The pope's clear intention has
been to speed the process up in order to perform the ceremony in his own
lifetime. The response was in the negative, according to Father Brian Kolodiejchuk,
the Canadian priest who has acted as postulator or advocate for the "canonization."
But the damage, to such integrity as the process possesses, has already
been done.
During the deliberations over the Second
Vatican Council, under the stewardship of Pope John XXIII, MT was to the
fore in opposing all suggestions of reform. What was needed, she maintained,
was more work and more faith, not doctrinal revision. Her position was
ultra-reactionary and fundamentalist even in orthodox Catholic terms. Believers
are indeed enjoined to abhor and eschew abortion, but they are not required
to affirm that abortion is "the greatest destroyer of peace," as MT fantastically
asserted to a dumbfounded audience when receiving the Nobel Peace Prize*.
Believers are likewise enjoined to abhor and eschew divorce, but they are
not required to insist that a ban on divorce and remarriage be a part of
the state constitution, as MT demanded in a referendum in Ireland (which
her side narrowly lost) in 1996. Later in that same year, she told Ladies
Home Journal that she was pleased by the divorce of her friend Princess
Diana, because the marriage had so obviously been an unhappy one …
This returns us to the medieval corruption
of the church, which sold indulgences to the rich while preaching hellfire
and continence to the poor. MT was not a friend of the poor. She was a
friend of poverty. She said that suffering was a gift from God. She spent
her life opposing the only known cure for poverty, which is the empowerment
of women and the emancipation of them from a livestock version of compulsory
reproduction. And she was a friend to the worst of the rich, taking misappropriated
money from the atrocious Duvalier family in Haiti (whose rule she praised
in return) and from Charles Keating of the Lincoln Savings and Loan. Where
did that money, and all the other donations, go? The primitive hospice
in Calcutta was as run down when she died as it always had been—she preferred
California clinics when she got sick herself—and her order always refused
to publish any audit. But we have her own claim that she opened 500 convents
in more than a hundred countries, all bearing the name of her own order.
Excuse me, but this is modesty and humility?
The rich world has a poor conscience, and
many people liked to alleviate their own unease by sending money to a woman
who seemed like an activist for "the poorest of the poor." People do not
like to admit that they have been gulled or conned, so a vested interest
in the myth was permitted to arise, and a lazy media never bothered to
ask any follow-up questions. Many volunteers who went to Calcutta came
back abruptly disillusioned by the stern ideology and poverty-loving practice
of the "Missionaries of Charity," but they had no audience for their story.
George Orwell's admonition in his essay on Gandhi—that saints should
always be presumed guilty until proved innocent—was drowned in a Niagara
of soft-hearted, soft-headed, and uninquiring propaganda.
One of the curses of India, as of other
poor countries, is the quack medicine man, who fleeces the sufferer by
promises of miraculous healing. Sunday was a great day for these parasites,
who saw their crummy methods endorsed by his holiness and given a more
or less free ride in the international press. Forgotten were the elementary
rules of logic, that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence
and that what can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without
evidence. More than that, we witnessed the elevation and consecration of
extreme dogmatism, blinkered faith, and the cult of a mediocre human personality.
Many more people are poor and sick because of the life of MT: Even more
will be poor and sick if her example is followed. She was a fanatic, a
fundamentalist, and a fraud, and a church that officially protects those
who violate the innocent has given us another clear sign of where it truly
stands on moral and ethical questions.
Correction, Oct. 21, 2003: This piece originally
claimed that in her Nobel Peace Prize lecture, Mother Teresa called abortion
and contraception the greatest threats to world peace. In that speech Mother
Teresa did call abortion "the greatest destroyer of peace." But she did
not much discuss contraception, except to praise "natural" family planning.(Return
to corrected sentence.)

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