Saturday, 1 October 2016

Was Mother Teresa good or bad?


‘ If you judge people, you have no time to love them.
There are no great things, only small things with great love. Happy are those.
Spread love everywhere you go. Let no one ever come to you without leaving happier. ’
MOTHER TERESA
She was Good lady.
"Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta" receiver of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 is known as one of the greatest humanitarians of her time to today for her life's dedication to help the society's poor, disabled, and outcasted.
When many people hear the name Mother Teresa, the first thing that usually pops into their head is an elderly nun that helped the poor. Although that may be somewhat true there is plenty more to her story that many are unaware of.
What caused her feet to become so deformed? Selflessness. She would wait until everyone else had selected the donated shoes giving them the best selection and leaving herself with the ill fitting ones.
Mother Teressa’s influence on India
When Mother Teresa moved to India she had no money, while she was there she saw how many people lived in poverty and got to know the feeling of not having money. By her going through not having money she realized how people were suffering therefore, she created the Missionary of Charity in 1950. She created this place for practically anyone who needed help in any certain way.
  • At first the citizens feared that Mother was here to change the religion of people but,there was no attempt to do this and slowly after a long-suffering effort on the part of the Sisters and Mother, they were hopefully able to gain the trust of the Indian people. Their main aim was to care for their needs. There was a notion that missionaries do everything for converting people.
  • Her first give back to the community of India was Missionaries of Charity in 1950. Mother Teresa's words for those who would need the help from the Missionaries of Charity were "the hungry, the naked, the homeless, the crippled, the blind, the lepers, all those people who feel unwanted, unloved, uncared for throughout society, people that have become a burden to the society and are shunned by everyone."
  • Now the home for the dying was opened in 1952 which was for the poor it was opened in Calcutta. it was something that i thought was so special and heartwarming to me because it just shows how much a WOMEN can actually do.
  • Shatni Nagar was the name of Mother Teresa's hospice for Leprosy Disease. Not only was there a hospice there were also many clinics through out Calcutta that gave them band-aids when they needed them, food, and medication whenever that was needed as well.
  • Another heart warming thing she did was create an orphanage called Nirmal Shishu Bhavan for those young children who were lost or homeless.
  • Another major thing i think is very important was how she created homes for those with HIV/AIDS. The home for the HIV/Aids was called Gift of Love.
  • These foundations are still active to date, Missionaries for Charity, which now numbers over 4,500 nuns and brothers who run almost 600 homes and hospices for the poor in 126 countries.
  • From transforming schools and homeless shelters in Calcutta to establishing AIDS hospices, shelters for lepers and addicts, and orphanages around the world, Mother Teresa affected millions of lives directly and indirectly.
  • Mother Teresa is an amazing inspiration to people all over the world, even after her death her legacy still carries on to this day. Orphanages, school, and shelters have been placed in honor of her selfless acts.
  • "I feel the greatest destroyer of peace today is abortion," Mother Teresa said in her 1979 Nobel lecture. This was a very bold statement, which are relevant even today.
  • When people died they were buried according to their own faith. Thousand of people had contracted leprosy at that time, a disease which measured in almost epidemic proportions. Leprosy was a horrible contagious disease, but treatable. Mother Teresa along with the help of other sisters established a leper town for the sufferers where they and their families could live in a clean, safe place and learn skills that would enable them to support themselves.
  • Many individuals and organizations took her as an example. Even the adversaries followed her and it helped social work to reach masses.
Her story is challenging for all of us. Born in Albania(a Muslim Majority country) she came to India and became an Indian. Out of love we called her mother irrespective of caste, creed, sex was not. More people will hopefully be interested in taking up social work as a profession.
Though she was kind and caring, she was not shy about standing up for what's right. She devoted her entire life caring for the poor of Calcutta, India. To this day, Mother Teresa continues to inspire people all over the world with her kindness and is seen as a religious role model to young people of all religions, showing great ways to demonstrate their faith.
Mother Teresa was embodied with vision, compassion, dedication and an excellent power to inspire others. Influencing others with her work was the main characteristic that differentiated her from the other leaders of the century. In an era of agents and promoters, Mother Teresa had no ambition to become a celebrity. Instead, her goal "was not to be successful but to be faithful."
Note : The new set of guidelines for adoption has streamlined the process for inter-country adoption. It makes adoption as easy or difficult for single parents and LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) couples as for married couples—one of the reasons that reportedly led to Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity, pioneers in this field in India, to stop adoptions altogether.
MOTHER TERESA ON CONVERSION
The Constitutions of the Missionaries of Charity state:
“We shall not impose our Catholic Faith on anyone, but have profound respect for all religions, for it is never lawful for anyone to force others to embrace the Catholic Faith against their conscience.”
This reflects the intention of Mother Teresa herself, and the Missionaries of Charity follow in her footsteps.
"I do convert," she once said to me when she was accused of converting Hindus to Catholicism. "I convert you to become a better Hindu or Muslim or Buddhist or Protestant. When you have found God, it is up to you to do with him what you wish."(Excerpts from Mother Teresa: The Authorized Biography)
She wanted people to come closer to God (however they understood Him) and believed that in this way they would also come closer to each other, love one another, and ultimately create a world that is better for everyone to live in. She felt no need to convert them because this was not her mission.
Mother Teresa believed that conversion is a work of God and that faith is a gift. She respected every person, including atheists or agnostics, and respected the faith they had or even lacked. Here is a short testimony of someone who was closely associated with Mother Teresa for 23 years: “I am a Hindu and I never saw the slightest evidence in all my 23 years of knowing Mother Teresa in the Missionaries of Charity, of converting. …

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