EUROPE | TECH | BUSINESS | ARTS | TRAVEL | PHOTOS | CURRENT ISSUE

Inspirations & Explorers
ddd ddd ddd ddd
ddd
ddd ddd ddd ddd
ddd
ddd ddd ddd ddd
ddd
ddd Inspirations & Explorers ddd ddd
ddd
ddd d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
Rebels & Leaders


This issue cover
carret 60 Years Of Heroes  
carret To Our Readers  
carret Table of Contents  
carret Subscribe to TIME  


ADVERTISEMENT
Inspirations & Explorers
Mother Teresa
The Saint of Calcutta spread her love to the unwanted, the homeless and the abandoned

print article Subscribe email TIME Europe My first sight of her was in her hospice of the Pure Heart in Calcutta 25 years ago. She was on her knees feeding, with a spoon and a plate of rice, a man who looked more like a cadaver than a human being. Suddenly, she sensed
 
other stories »
 
Get The Magazine
Try 4 issues FREE
Get unlimited access to the TIME Archive and free delivery to your door
Give a gift of TIME
my presence behind her. She turned around and abruptly handed me her plate: "Go on feeding this man," she said, "and love him." Those words—and actions—reflect Mother Teresa's message. To love those who have never been loved. To love the unwanted, the homeless, the abandoned, as if each one were Jesus Christ himself. For nearly 40 years, the Saint of Calcutta spread her message throughout India and the rest of the world.

And yet, from her arrival in Calcutta in 1929 as a young Albanian nun of the Loreto missionary order, her life had begun in a very different way. For years, she taught history and geography in Loreto schools in Calcutta and elsewhere. But on Sept. 10, 1946, she heard a call while on a train taking her to a retreat in Darjeeling at the foot of the Himalayas.

The inner voice told her to give up the comfort of her surroundings, and to go and share the life of the inhabitants of the nearest slum. She wrote to the Vatican for permission, and went to the bazaar to buy a cheap piece of white cotton cloth bordered with blue. This humble sari was to become the uniform of the exceptional congregation she then set up to serve the poorest of the poor, wherever they were: the homeless, the hungry, lepers, unwanted babies, aids victims. In 1979, she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Today, Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity carry on her ideal of compassion to all suffering human beings—with the same message I heard from her lips the very first day I met her in Calcutta: "Love them."

Dominique Lapierre scripted a film about Mother Teresa and is the author of City of Joy. He also co-wrote Freedom at Midnight, O Jerusalem! and Is Paris Burning?

« back: Bono & Bob Geldof


TIME Europe's Heroes 2003
April 28, 2004
TIME Europe's Heroes 2004
October 11, 2004
TIME Europe's Heroes 2005
October 10, 2005


QUICK LINKS: Business & Culture | Inspirations & Explorers | Rebels & Leaders | Back to TIMEeurope.com Home

Copyright © Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Search | Write to Us | Letter to the Editor | Customer Service | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Press Releases