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Showing posts with label Mother Teresa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mother Teresa. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

 Mother Teresa 

 Mother Teresa Home in Panjim, Goa is located at an important junction, connecting the 18th June Road and the road leading to St. Inez. St. Don Bosco School which is located nearby is an important landmark to help a visitor to find the Home for the Aged and Destitute run by the Missionaries of Charity sisters.

Many years back in late 1970s, I was a frequent visitor to this institution along with my Jesuits-run Loyola Hall pre-novitiate colleagues. We pre-novices who were also studying in Miramar-based Dhempe College offered our services to give regular hair-cuts to the poor, disabled and senior citizens inmates of the Mother Teresa Home there.

On Sunday morning, soon after the weekly mass, our group of three to four pre-novice (or pre-seminary) youths used to arrive at the Mother Teresa Home equipped with aprons, pairs of scissors, shaving cream, and razors. Our sole mission was to give a new or somewhat civilised look to the male inmates who most often looked barbarian with their long disheveled, unkempt hair and long grown beards.

The nuns there, a majority of whom were Keralites or Bengalis, would entrust us with the inmates and get themselves busy catering to the large number of destitute women, children and elders living there.

The next two to three hours, we would give the inmates haircuts, shave their beards and also cut nails of their fingers and toes. One by one, the inmates would step into the wooden chairs placed before us and by the time we finished our job, they would have a complete new look as they would get haircut and shaving done only once in three months. The old, destitute persons used to look very fresh and content after the haircut and shaving.

I recalled these scenes at Mother Teresa Homes when I watched a nearly comatose patient long haired `Anand Bhai’ getting a clean, new look in Sanjay Dutt’s film `Munnabhai MBBS’.

At that time, as a teenager, I had not even started shaving myself and so as a precautionary measure for the safety of those people, I confined my services only for giving haircuts to those senior citizen destitute.

The last time I visited the Mother Teresa Home in Panjim was in early 1980s when Mother Teresa arrived in Goa for the first time after she was conferred the Nobel Peace Award. The Government of India too had later honoured her with a Bharat Ratna award.

However this time I was visiting the Missionaries of Charity Home in a different capacity. I was no longer a Jesuit pre-novice, a person attached to a religious congregation. I had arrived there as a reporter of a local English daily, The Navhind Times. The nuns at the destitute home who knew me personally were transferred and others had replaced them.

I saw the Nobel laureate sitting in a wooden chair at the same open place where we used to give haircuts to the inmates. There were not many people there. I approached Mother Teresa and as was her wont, with her folded hands, she shook hands with me and mumbled some hardly audible words. The Mother at that time was already in her seventies. I lingered around her for some time, hoping to get a good copy for my newspaper. But I was disappointed.

Mother Teresa spoke very little, almost in a whispering voice, about loving everyone, especially those in need. About being selfless and doing everything in the name of Lord! That was not exactly the content which would make page one headlines or news. While returning to my newspaper office, I wondered what would be the intro for my news copy. The Navhind Times next day carried my news story on an inside page with a photo of the Mother Teresa at the destitute home.

Of course to be honest, at that time I was not awed by her personality. The realisation of being privileged to have come in contact with Mother Teresa came only in retrospect.

Mother Teresa passed away on 5 September 1997. Fifteen years after her death, once again I came in association with the Missionaries of Charity in another role and in a foreign land, at Rome in Italy. On an Europe tour along with my wife and daughter, I stayed along with the priests belonging to the Missionaries of Charity (Male), a congregation co- founded by Mother Teresa and doing the similar work for the destitute.

We had camped at the Missionaries of Charity centre at Via S Agapito 8 in Rome for a week, I realised that the poor, destitute and the homeless in Europe are, of course, are not as those in India. They are well-dressed and when moving outside, one can hardly believe that they are inmates of the destitute centre. A majority of these destitute and homeless are alcoholics and drug addicts.

These inmates are expected to return to the centre before the supper at 7 pm as the gates of the institution are locked for them by this time. Although offered free food and shelter at centre, some of these inmates are seen on the road, famous churches, begging to earn cash to purchase liquor or drugs.

During my stay there, twice I witnessed one or inmates returning to the destitute centre past the deadline totally sozzled and therefore forced to spend the night on the road. Since this was quiet routine affair with these inmates, no compassion was shown to them, I was told.

We journalists are privileged to come in contact with veterans from various fields, power wielding politicians, senior government officials, celebrities, and so on. Often, we tend to view them with cynicism.

Pope John Paul II canonised Mother Teresa, making her the first person to be declared a saint in a shortest period after her death. Incidentally. Pope John Paul himself became the second person to be declared a saint posthumously in a shortest duration.

Both Mother Teresa and Pope John Paul are the two saints I observed from a very close distance during their lifetimes and as a journalist, covered their functions for my newspaper.

Camil Parkhe 

Friday, April 1, 2016

Pope Francis may visit India this year

Pope Francis may visit India this year
Reporters Name | CAMIL PARKHE | Thursday, 31 March 2016 AT 10:35 PM IST
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http://www.sakaaltimes.com/NewsDetails.aspx?NewsId=5485323426147461785&SectionId=5171561142064258099&SectionName=Pune&NewsDate
=20160331&NewsTitle=Pope%20Francis%20may%20visit%20India%20this%20year



PUNE: There are high chances that Pope Francis may visit India this year as the Catholic Bishops Conference of India has formally urged the Indian government to invite the pontiff on a state visit. If Pope Francis accepts India’s invitation, it will be the fourth papal visit to the country.

Cardinal Baselios Cleemis, President of the CBCI, has recently sent an invitation to the Pope to visit India. As per the procedure, the CBCI has also requested Prime Minister Narendra Modi to formally in-vite the pontiff to India.

Head of the Roman Catholic Church is also the head of the Vatican City state and therefore as per the protocol, needs a formal invitation by both the Indian government and the Indian Catholic Church to visit the country.

The Church leadership in the country would be happy if the Pope attends the proposed canonisation ceremony of Mother Teresa in Kolkata. Pope Francis has already announced that the Nobel laureate would be formally declared a saint on September 3, on the eve of her death anniversary. The visit of the global head of the Catholic community in India is expected to boost the image of the BJP government, which is often accused of being anti-minorities.

Pope Paul VI was the first Pope to visit India to attend the international Eucharistic Congress held in Mumbai in 1964. Pope John Paul II was on a 10-day India visit in 1986 and again on a three-day visit to New Delhi in November 1999. Incidentally, Pakistan had also last month sent a formal invitation to Pope Francis to visit Pakistan. Pope John Paul II had visited Pakistan in 1981.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Mother Teresa’s canonisation an acknowledgement of dedication

Mother Teresa’s canonisation an acknowledgement of dedication
Reporters Name | CAMIL PARKHE | Wednesday, 16 March 2016 AT 12:43 PM IST
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During her lifetime, Mother Teresa was referred to as the living saint as she along with her Missionaries of Charity congregation nuns served the poor and the destitute all over the world. Now the Catholic Church has decided to formally declare her as a saint on September 4, on the eve of her 19th death anniversary. There are already five other St Teresas in the list of saints declared by the Church, St Teresa of Avila being the most famous among them. Therefore Mother Teresa will be henceforth will have to be referred to as St Mother Teresa of Kolkata to provide her a distinct identity.

Canonisation or the method of bestowing sainthood in the Catholic Church is a complicated and a very lengthy process. There are many persons belonging to the previous centuries who have crossed the first stage of beatification and are awaiting the crucial and final stage of canonisation for decades. Joseph Vaz from Goa who worked in Sri Lanka in the 17th century and was declared Blessed in 1995 was declared saint by Pope Francis only last year. There are many persons declared Blessed but may never be declared as saints. Comparatively Mother Teresa has been declared a saint in a short span of 19 years after her death. Pope John Paul II was declared saint recently in the shortest span in the 2000 year old history of the Catholic Church.

Born at Skopje, now capital of the Republic of Macedonia, Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu left her home at the age of 18 to become a nun and arrived in India in 1929 and lived here until her death seven decades later.

Mother Teresa was one of the most prominent personalities of the 20th century. Her five-decade long service to the orphaned children, lepers, the aged and other destitute attracted the world’s prominent personalities including heads of the states, films stars and philanthropists to her house in Kolkata. Pope John Paul II, Lady Diana were among those called on her and appreciated her service to the needy.

Mother Teresa’s work among the poor and destitute won her the Nobel award and the Indian government too bestowed on her the coveted Bharat Ratna award.

Soon after she was presented the Nobel award, Mother Teresa had arrived on a visit to Goa. As a reporter of a local daily, I had then covered her tour and got an opportunity to watch this living saint. The Mother was not an eloquent orator and most of the times, she was not even audible. But her smile was spontaneous and contagious. With her humility and dedicated work, the frail woman was successful in attracting a large number of women to the congregation Missionaries of Charity founded by her and open several homes for the destitute and the aged all over the world. Having faith in her work, philanthropists all over the world happily funded her projects. During my visit to Rome, I had the opportunity to witness the work of the male section of the Missionaries of Charity who offer food and shelter to the destitute.

During her lifetime, Mother Teresa’s work had also caused controversies. She was accused of exploiting the poverty of the people for evangelisation. After her death too, controversies did not elude her. Recently an allegation was levelled against her that she served the poor and needy with the intention of converting those people to Christianity. Notwithstanding the charges, Mother Teresa continued her work, never replied to the charges against her. Her canonisation will bring smiles on the faces of all those who appreciate her dedicated service.

Comments
Savio Abreu - Friday, 18 March 2016 AT 04:46 PM IST
True. The canonisation of Mother Teresa is a proud moment for all Indians. The work she did among the poor, sick, destitutes in Kolkata is remarkable. She is a true Indian since she worked for the welfare of the people of India, in fact gave her life for them. All of us should follow her model rather than mouthing platitudes about nationalism and patriotism and polarising the nation. I congratulate Camil on a nice article.
 
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Ajit Waghmare - Wednesday, 16 March 2016 AT 10:15 PM IST
Nice Article. Well Summarised. Brings pride to us, Indians.
 
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Monday, May 19, 2014

Bharat Ratna Mother Teresa

Contribution of Christian missionaries in India

8. Bharat Ratna Mother Teresa



A 19-year-old young European girl arrived in Kolkata in 1929 with a mission to serve the people in India and thereafter got identified with the city. This nun who is known all over the world as Mother Teresa of Kolkata, later got identified with this historic city. She drew attention of the entire world to the most neglected sections of the society, the lepers, the sick and aged destitute dying on the streets. She emphasised that these persons had right not only to live but also to live with honour and dignity.

Mother Teresa was born in a village Skopje of Yugoslavia on August 27, 1910. After the partition of Yugoslavia, now this village falls under the new country called Macedonia. Her original name was Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhius. Her father's name was Nicholas and mother's name was Dranafile Bernei. Agnes lost her father when she was seven years old. Her mother brought up three children. Agnes' elder brother's name was Lazar and elder sister's name was Agatha.
In 1928, at the age of 18, Agnes took leave of her mother and siblings, to become a nun and joined the Sister's of Loreto congregation. Agnes' mother expired at the age of 83. But Agnes never met her mother after leaving the home to become a nun. Loreto congregation used to run schools in India and thus young Agnes came to India to teach in one of the schools run by this congregation.
Agnes had now become Sister Teresa. She had chosen the name after St Teresa of the child Jesus, a Carmelite nun who is also referred to as 'Little Flower'. This nun was made a saint in 1925 and in 1927, she was declared as a patron saint of the missions.
On May 24, 1931, Sister Teresa took her first vows of poverty, chastity and obedience in Darjeeling. The three vows were to be renewed every year until the person took the final vows many years later.

Sr. Teresa worked as a primary teacher and subsequently as the principal of St. Mary's School of Loreto congregation in Entally, a suburb of Kolkata for many years. She was living with other nuns in Loreto Convent. The girls studying in St. Mary's School were from the upper strata of the society. Sr. Teresa had almost no contact with the socially and economically weaker sections of the society.

Fr. Henry, the priest of the Catholic parish Entally, used to work in slums of Kolkata. Sr. Teresa accompanied him during his visits to the slums. The visits offered her insights into the lives of the people living in these slums.

Sister Teresa never had an opportunity to know the poor people while she served in St. Mary's School. When she walked on the streets of Kolkata, she used to feel pity for the lepers begging on roads, skinny rickshaw-pullers suffering from tuberculosis and still pulling rickshaws to survive and the old sick people on the verge of death. The sights of these people made her restless, as she was unable to do anything for them. She had come to India with a mission to serve Christ. Now she felt sad that even as a nun, she was unable to improve the lives of these underprivileged people.

Every congregation of the Catholic priests and nuns selects a particular field of service for their activities. Of these, some congregations are active in the fields of education, medicine, social or religious mission. The Sisters of Loreto congregation had chosen the field of education. After 1939, Sr. Teresa felt a strong urge to establish her own congregation especially to serve the poor from slums of Kolkata.

For this purpose, she needed the sanction from the Pope, the spiritual head of the Catholic Church. She received the permission from the Vatican and in 1948, Sr. Teresa got out of the Loreto congregation to establish her own religious order and to serve the most needy sections in society.
As a nun not affiliated to any congregation, Sr. Teresa now did not have a roof over head. She was not sure of getting two meals a day. Her educational experience was also of no use to serve lepers, sick people or orphan infants lying on roads, footpaths or near dustbins. To serve and nurse these needy people, she took training in nursing. Now she was well equipped to serve the sick and the dying people lying on the streets of Kolkata.

Sr. Teresa named her congregation as Missionaries of Charity. As a member of the Loreto Congregation, she used to wear a long white robe and a black headgear. For her new congregation, she chose a uniform, which was purely Indian. The uniform was a white cotton sari with a blue border, which was worn, in Bengali style.

After leaving the Loreto convent, Sr. Teresa spent the nights at the convent of the Little Sisters of the Poor. She used to run a school for children of motijhil slum throughout the day. The Little Sisters of the Poor congregation paid for her tram fair. Sr. Teresa used to beg in Kolkata city for money to provide bathing soap for slum children, medicines for the sick and food to the hungry.
Later, never ever a generous rich person denied money to this nun because they were sure that she was not asking for money for herself but for the people who needed health and care the most. But such situation did not prevail in the 1950’s when Sister Teresa had just launched her work.

In those days, Sr. Teresa used to move from door to door and beg for alms. Each time, she was required to explain the reason for begging alms. Some people would refuse help while a few others offered a little help.

Some days later, Sr. Teresa got a room to stay in an old building. There, she did not have anything except a wooden box. The Missionaries of Charity congregation took its shape in this room only. The young girls who started working as novices of the Missionaries of Charity used to stay in that room. Sr. Teresa stayed there for four years, till 1953.

While Sr. Teresa was working all alone in slums, one of her former students, Subhashini Das, came to meet her one day. That 18-year-old girl wanted to work with Sr. Teresa. Subhashini was the first girl to join the Missionaries of Charity as a novice. Subhashini Das became Sister Agnes. She later became the second in-command, next only to Mother Teresa, in the Missionaries of Charity. After Mother Teresa's death, Sr. Agnes took over as the head of the congregation.
The head of a Catholic nuns' congregation is addressed as the 'Mother'. Thus, Sr. Teresa became Mother Teresa. She became the mother of the destitute, the poor and the neglected people. She and the nuns in her congregation took care of these people with love and affection.

After starting a school in Motijhil slums, Mother Teresa opened a dispensary there. Coolies from Kolkata, rickshaw pullers and other poor people visited the dispensary to receive treatment for various ailments. Among them, the number of tuberculosis patients was the highest. Mother Teresa established an alms house for giving free food to people staying on roads and to people who were reduced to skeletons due to hunger. She opened sanatorium for lepers and Shishubhavan for looking after abandoned infants found in dustbins, on the steps of dispensary and near gutters. The young girls joining the institute started working with the Mother to serve these destitute abandoned by the society.

Missionaries of Charity have many convents or centres the world over. Out of these, the most acclaimed centre is Nirmal Hriday or Home for the dying destitute. Some of these people are orphans and some are those abandoned by their relatives due to leprosy and some other dreaded or chronic diseases. Mother Teresa established Nirmal Hriday to offer affection and care to these people even when though some of these persons were almost on deathbed.

Kolkata Municipal Corporation gave a piece of land for Nirmal Hriday near the famous Kali Mata Temple on the banks of Hoogli River. Since then, for the last five decades, thousands of dying destitute have experienced the nuns' love and affection at this centre and then breathed their last.

Jesus Christ has said - 'Whatsoever you do to the least of my brothers, that you do unto me'. And so, Mother Teresa and her nuns saw Jesus Christ in these lepers, Dalits, orphan infants and children, the hungry and thirsty. Some people accused Mother Teresa and her congregation of exploiting the helpless destitute and converting them to Christianity. Christian missionaries have always faced this accusation. But Mother Teresa never retaliated. To retaliate to the criticism of people was not her nature. She continued to quietly serve people in distress. Due to progress in medical science, many diseases that were considered incurable earlier can now be treated and cured. But Mother Teresa used to say that being deserted and neglected by our own people was the most serious disease and that any amount of money, medicines or therapy would not cure such a disease. Serving these neglected people, giving them warmth of love and affection was the only assured cure for that disease.

The Mother would often say that the government administration would provide shelter to destitute, the sick and the aged in orphanages or other centres. But who would satisfy their hunger for love and affection?

Only a visit to one of the centres runs by the Missionaries of Charity would offer an insight into the noble and most difficult work carried out by these nuns. Some of these patients' limbs are decomposed, some have become spastic due to old age, and other inmates are a few-day-old infants abandoned on roads by their parents. Here at these centres, every person, irrespective of his or her caste, religion, language and region are served with the same affection and care. Mother Teresa asked her nuns to go to the places wherever natural or human-made calamity had struck and serve there the victims and the needy people.

In 1960, Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru inaugurated the Home for the dying destitute in Delhi. It was the first branch of the Missionaries of Charity outside Kolkata. In 1965, the congregation opened its centre in Venezuela to serve the needy at global level.
The money required for food, medicines and shelter of these needy people, orphans and sick people would not last long. But while running these centres for nearly 50 years, Mother Teresa never ever felt frustrated due to financial difficulties. She never shirked from her mission to serve people on the grounds of paucity of funds. The Mother was an incorrigible optimist. She was gifted with inexhaustible optimism that, some miracle would take place and her financial problems would be solved. Her work went on all over the world, notwithstanding numerous problems and its scope widened on a large scale.

There were many veteran personalities from India and abroad who brought help for Mother Teresa's mission. The important personalities who personally met the Mother and gave a helping hand in her mission included former prime ministers Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi, Pope Paul VI, Pope John Paul II, Princess Diana, former US President Ronald Regan, Queen Elizabeth II, former Chief Minister of West Bengal Jyoti Basu and so on. Many of them visited the Mother's house and Nirmal Hriday and witnessed her work.

People the world over became familiar with Mother Teresa, walking with a bend due to her old age, soft spoken and always having a cheerful smile on the face.

This nun remained humble and polite even after winning several accolades at national and international levels. In one of the functions of the United Nations Organisations (UNO), the world body's former Secretary General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar introduced Mother Teresa as 'the most powerful woman in the world'. He was obviously referring to her moral strength gained due to noble mission. Mahatma Gandhi too with his simple living style and moral strength had become powerful enough to ask the British to quit India and thus shake up the mighty British Empire. Mother Teresa would remain in the limelight with various State heads and famous people from different fields for a while and then would return to her work.
Mother Teresa was showered with numerous laurels. The millions of rupees she received in the form of these awards enabled her to help more and more needy people. The centres of the Missionaries of Charity spread all over the world needed thousands of kilos of rice, wheat and vegetables everyday and this funds helped to meet this need.

The Missionaries of Charity opened their house at Amravati in Maharashtra in 1962. The congregation had taken a giant step from Kolkata. The nuns there had to converse not in Hindi or Bengali but in Marathi language.

Mother Teresa traveled extensively in different parts of India and abroad. The train journey would however take long time and the air travel of course was too expensive. So she approached the government of India to give some free tickets to travel by Indian Airlines and Air India. After the initial hesitation, the government administration conceded her request. The ministry of Railways also had made such a facility available to her for her railway journey.
In 1962, the government of India honoured Mother Teresa with the title Padma Shree. She was perhaps the first Catholic nun to receive this national civil honour. Later, in the same year, she received Raman Magsaysay award. The Nobel award for peace received by her in 1979 was the most prestigious award offered to her. In 1980, the then President of India Neelam Sanjiva Reddy honoured Mother Teresa with the country's highest civil award, the Bharat Ratna.

Mother Teresa was opposed to legalisation of abortions. She treated foeticide or abortion due to any reason as a sin. She never changed her views even after India and many other countries had legalised abortions. Although, many people did not agree with her views on abortion, she voiced them forcefully at various platforms. She would say that if a person or a family did not want their new born infant, they should send the baby to the Missionaries of Charity soon after its birth and the congregation would take up the responsibility to look after the child. Many unwanted infants have survived due to the humanitarian stance taken by Mother Teresa's congregation.

Mother Teresa passed away on 5 September 1997 in Kolkata, the city that she had come to be associated with. At international level, she is also referred to as Mother Teresa of Kolkata. Many world leaders attended her last rites and paid tributes to this humble nun. Soon after her death, the then Pope John Paul II initiated the process to canonise her. Of course, the Mother during her lifetime itself was called a living saint.

References :
1) 'Mother Teresa' (Marathi)- Asha Kardaley, Rajhans Prakashan, 1025, Sadashiv Peth, Pune 411 030 (1994)

2) 'Mother Teresa - Missionary of Charity' - Sam Wellman, Om Books, P O Box 2014, Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh, 500 003 (First Indian edition 2003, reprint 2005)






NUNS HAIL RELEASE OF MOTHER TERESA COIN

NUNS HAIL RELEASE OF MOTHER TERESA COIN
- CAMIL PARKHE
Wednesday, 18 August 2010 - 12:09 PM IST

Nuns belonging to the Missionaries of Charity, a congregation founded by Mother Teresa, have expressed their joy over the government’s decision to release a coin in honour of the Nobel laureate on the occasion of her birth centenary later this month.

The coin would be released by President Pratibha Patil at the launch of year-long birth centenary celebrations in Delhi on August 28. 

The Missionaries of Charity, who have three homes for orphans and destitute in Pune, Chinchwad and Wakad, have planned a number of activities to celebrate their founder’s birth centenary and also on her death anniversary on September 5.

Sr Mary Angelic, superior of the Missionaries of Charity’s home at Tadiwala Road, said that it was indeed a noble gesture to honour the Blessed Mother Teresa of Kolkata.

Sr Angelic said that the design of the coin manufactured by the coins and currency department of the finance ministry has not yet been revealed.

The design of the coin has been approved by Sister Prema, Kolkata-based head of the Missionaries of Charity.

There are over 100 aged destitutes in the congregation’s Pune and Chinchwad convents, while the convent at Wakad has 200 destitutes including mentally challenged girls and 18 HIV-positive orphaned children.

Most of the inmates at the three houses are children and aged persons belonging to various religions and who have been abandoned by their relatives. These people are offered food, shelter and healthcare free-of-cost.

UNIQUE HONOUR
It would be the first time that a coin would be released in the memory of a Christian missionary. In the past, the government has released postal stamps to honour St Francis Xavier, linguist Rev William Carey, Sanskrit scholar Fr Robert De Nobili, and social reformer and Bible translator from Maharashtra, Pandita Ramabai.

 
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Sunday, September 26, 2010

MOTHER TERESA'S BIRTH CENTENARY COMMENCES SANS FANFARE

MOTHER’S BIRTH CENTENARY COMMENCES SANS FANFARE

CAMIL PARKHE
Friday, August 27, 2010 AT 11:10 AM (IST)
Tags: Pune, Mother Teresa, birth anniversary, Missionaries of Charity, Thomas Dabre, Camil Parkhe
The nuns belonging to the Missionaries of Charity congregation, founded by Mother Teresa, launched year-long birth centenary celebrations of their founder, sans any fanfare, here on Thursday.
It was business as usual at the three houses of Missionaries of Charity at Tadiwala Road, Chinchwad and Wakad, where the nuns continued their routine activities of caring for the aged, destitute and special children sheltered at these convents.
The only special feature marking the birth centenary of the Nobel Laureate was the prayers held at the three convents in the morning.
The nuns, commonly referred to as Mother Teresa sisters, also attended religious services at the nearby churches where special mass was offered for the early sainthood of their founder, who was referred to as a living saint during her lifetime.
Mother Teresa had visited the Missionaries of Charity convent at Tadiwala Road and St Patrick’s Cathedral during her visit to the city.
Pope John Paul II had declared the Macedonia-born nun as ‘Blessed’, a stage prior to declaring her as a saint.
As per the Church’s tradition, some more proved miracles are required for declaring the Blessed Mother Teresa of Kolkata as a saint.
Pune Bishop Thomas Dabre had directed all churches in Pune diocese, comprising Pune, Pimpri Chinchwad and nearby four districts, to offer special masses to seek expedition of the process for the Mother’s canonisation.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Routine Oct 19 for these ( Missionaries of Charity) nuns

Times of India , Pune


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/pune/Routine-Oct-19-for-these-nuns/articleshow/237444.cms


Routine Oct 19 for these nuns

Camil Parkhe, TNN, Oct 17, 2003, 12.56am IST


PUNE: It will be “business as usual” for the local nuns of the Missionaries of Charity (MC) on October 19, when churches in the country and abroad celebrate the beatification of their founder, Mother Teresa.
Beatification is a step prior to the declaration of sainthood. The Pope has chosen October 19 — the day he celebrates the silver jubilee of his own Pontificate — for Mother Teresa’s beatification.

The Catholic church all over the country has arranged many programmes to commemorate the beatification of Mother Teresa on Sunday. But the nuns from the MC’s two city houses will — as always — be busy on that day, attending to their 200-odd sick and dying destitute inmates.

The “Mother Teresa sisters” — as the MC nuns are popularly called — personally look after the needs of the destitute at their homes. A group of eight nuns at the Tadiwala road home attends to the needs of over 120 female destitutes, while six others take care of over 100 male destitutes at the MC’s home in Chinchwad.

A visit to these homes will testify the selfless service offered by these nuns to people belonging to all castes and religions.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Book salutes missionary contributions




28 Sep 2003, Times of India, Pune

PUNE: A compilation of biographies (in Marathi) of early Christian missionaries in India, emphasising their social saga and triumph was released in the city on Saturday. Authored by The Times of India journalist Camil Parkhe, the book 'Christi Missionaryanche Yogdaan' (Christian missionaries' contribution) was released in the presence of the Bishop of Pune Valerian D'Souza by Sada Dumbre, editor, Saptahik Sakal. The function was held at the Patrakar Bhavan. On the cover page is an ode to the Marathi language, written amazingly in flowing Marathi, nearly 400 years ago around Chhatrapati Shivaji's birth) by British-born, Goa-based Fr Thomas Stephens. And on the back cover is a verse by Rev. Narayan Waman Tilak. These quotes set the tone for the series of 24 inspirational biographies. From well-known names like Pandita Ramabai, Mother Teresa and Fr Graham Staines, to less ‘famous' missionaries who walked the remote countryside, embraced local language and culture and set benchmarks in various fields.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

At 101, Fr Neuner has a quiet birthday


Sakaal Times Pune August 20, 2009
At 101, Fr Neuner has a quiet birthday celebration CAMIL PARKHE
Pune: Fr Joseph Neuner, veteran Indologist, theologian and spiritual advisor to Mother Teresa, celebrated his 101st birthday at Sanjeevan Ashram, headquarters of the Pune Jesuit province, here on Wednesday.Fr Neuner, born on August 19, 1908 at Feldkirch in Austria, has been a Puneite since 1938. As professor of theology at Jnana Deep Vidyapeeth, he has taught thousands of priests, some of whom rose to be bishops and cardinals.
The centurion was in a cheerful mood, receiving greetings from people when this Sakaal Times reporter called on him on Wednesday. The priest was greeted by his fellow Jesuits and others on his 101st birthday."Fr Neuner did not want a big celebration and so we did not invite many people for the birthday," said Fr Anil Soares, one of the priests residing at the Jesuit provincialate.
Although his movement and activities have now been restricted, Fr Neuner still follows the community routine at the Jesuit house. He has meals and tea along with other Jesuits. Refusing to be assisted, he comes to the dining hall with the support of a walker. He converses with others on the latest happenings although in the recent past, he has been hard on hearing. "But he never misses his exercise of walking in the passage with the walker,"adds Fr Soares. Neuner, who for a few years, stayed on the first floor of `Sanjeevan Ashram' was shifted to the ground floor when he neared his century.
Before his arrival in India, Neuner had completed a doctorate thesis at Rome-based Gregorian University on the theme, `The idea of sacrifice in the Bhagvadgita'. During World War II, Neuner along with other German nationals in the country, was detained by the British government and was incarcerated for over five years, initially in Ahmednagar and later at Dehradun.
Neuner served as an expert at the Vatican Council II, which is said to have ushered in reforms in the Catholic Church.
The Catholic Church had appointed Neuner as censor theoloigicus in 1999 for the proceeding launched for beatification of Mother Teresa.His job was to study the nun's published writings to find if they contained any heresy. The Mother was declared a Blessed, a step towards sainthood, a few years later.

Neuner Centenarian inspires all

Centenarian who inspires all
Camil Parkhe
Sakaal Times
Wednesday, October 01st, 2008 AT 10:10 AM
Tags: centenarian Joseph Neuner
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All’s well: Joseph Neuner
PUNE: The German who left his country 70 years back to make Pune his home, Fr Joseph Neuner, who celebrated his 100th birthday on August 19, is one of the few centenarian Puneites who have seen the city changing over the years.
The priest with a sharp mind and a soft heart had taught theology at the De Nobili College in the city for several years. Some of his students are now bishops in India and abroad. Born in Feldkirch in Austria on August 19, 1908, he was ordained a priest in 1936 and came to India in 1938.
During the Second World War, he along with other German nationals in India, was imprisoned and detained first in Ahmednagar and later in Dehradun.
Fr Neuner was having evening tea at his residence, Sanjeevan Ashram, on Dhole Patil Road when this correspondent called on him on the eve of the Senior Citizens Day.
Being one of the experts from India who participated in the Second Vatican Council held in Rome from 1963-65, he had also drafted the speech for Pope Paul VI when the pontiff addressed a multi-religious gathering in Mumbai in 1964.
“Even at this age, the centenarian is very particular about his daily routine exercise and likes to walk around with the help of a walker,” says Fr Edwin Sequeira (80), a companion of Fr Neuner at Sanjeevan Ashram. “He also likes to eat sweets, especially chocolates,” he added.
Fr Neuner wrote his autobiography ‘Memories of my life’ when he completed 95 years in 2003.
“The clergyman enjoys normal diet, including non-vegetarian. Two years back, he broke his hip bone after a fall and since then moves around with a walker. Although now he is hard of hearing, he detests the idea of using a hearing equipment,” said Fr Sequeira, adding, “He keeps himself abreast of happenings around the world and likes to be part of the conversation at the dining table.”