Born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu in 1910, Mother Teresa set up her
Missionaries of Charity in the slums of Kolkata in 1950 and made her
headquarters in the Indian city for nearly half a century.Her small figure in a white-and-blue sari and sandals became familiar around the world. She died in Kolkata in 1997 at age 87.
Mother
Teresa, a Catholic nun who devoted her life to helping India's poor,
has been declared a saint in a canonization Mass held by Pope Francis in
the Vatican.
Pope Francis
delivered the formula for the canonization of the Albanian-born nun --
known as the "saint of the gutters" -- before huge crowds of pilgrims
gathered in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on Sunday morning.
Applause
broke out before he completed the formula of canonization, in which he
declared "Blessed Teresa of Kolkata to be a saint."
Speaking
in Latin, Francis said that "after due deliberation and frequent prayer
for divine assistance, and having sought the counsel of many of our
brother bishops, we declare and define Blessed Teresa of Kolkata to be a
saint, and we enroll her among the saints, decreeing that she is to be
venerated as such by the whole church."
Catholics
-- including hundreds of blue- and white-robed nuns from Missionaries
of Charity sisterhood founded by Mother Teresa -- had gathered from
around the world to attend the canonization of the church's newest
saint, just 19 years after her death.
A
huge portrait of Mother Teresa, whom the church credits with having
performed two miraculous cures of the sick, hung from St. Peter's
Basilica during the colorful ceremony.
Pope Francis then delivered a homily, in
which he praised Mother Teresa -- "this emblematic figure of womanhood
and of consecrated life" -- for her charitable work.
"Mother
Teresa, in all aspects of her life, was a generous dispenser of divine
mercy, making herself available for everyone through her welcome and
defense of human life, those unborn and those abandoned and discarded,"
he said.
"She bowed down before
those who were spent, left to die on the side of the road, seeing in
them their God-given dignity. She made her voice heard before the powers
of this world, so that they might recognize their guilt for the crime
of poverty they created."
For the newly-sainted Teresa, he said,
"mercy was the salt which gave flavor to her work, it was the light
which shone in the darkness of the many who no longer had tears to shed
for their poverty and suffering."
She was an example to volunteers around the world, he said. "May she be your model of holiness."
In
a departure from his scripted remarks, he noted that people "may
struggle" to refer to her as "Saint Teresa." "With great spontaneity, I
think we will continue to call her Mother Teresa," he said.
Prayers
were then delivered in a number of languages, including Albanian,
Mother Teresa's native tongue, and Bengali, the language of Kolkata,
where a special Mass was celebrated at the Missionaries of Charity
Sunday. A prayer was delivered in Chinese for persecuted Christians
around the world.
About 1,500 homeless people from across Italy were bused into the Vatican to be given seats of honor at the Mass -- and be served a pizza lunch by nuns afterward.
About 1,500 homeless people from across Italy were bused into the Vatican to be given seats of honor at the Mass -- and be served a pizza lunch by nuns afterward.
Most of the Catholic Church's saints or
blessed people are honored decades, if not centuries, after their
deaths. Traditionally, there is a mandatory five-year waiting period
before formal evaluation of a candidate for beatification can begin.
Mother Teresa's devotees
began pressing the Vatican soon after her death to speed up the nun's
sainthood cause, saying her holiness was clear to many around the world.
Pope John Paul II granted the special dispensation in 1999, and the
procedure began.
The pope waived the waiting period in part, some believe, because of her fame and reputation.
John
Paul II further paved the way for her beatification in 2002, when he
approved a miracle attributed to Mother Teresa after her death.
The approved miracle involved Monica Besra, a 30-year-old Kolkata woman
who said praying to the nun cured a stomach tumor. The Vatican
committee said in October 2002 that it could find no "scientific
explanation" for the woman's recovery.
"I
took doctors' medicines, threw up and was in a lot of pain. But when I
prayed to Mother Teresa from my heart, Mother Teresa blessed me and now I
am healthy," Besra told CNN last week.
"My entire village and I am very happy that she is being made a saint."
Pope Francis formally announced that Mother Teresa would be declared a saint in March 2016, when he recognized a second miracle attributed to her.
A Brazilian man with multiple brain tumors was healed after loved ones prayed to Mother Teresa to heal him, according to Avvenire, a newspaper affiliated to the Catholic Church.










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