Monday, November 15, 2021 When Calcutta Burned with Hatred

“In 1963 the Hindu-Muslim riots were happening in Calcutta.  People were trapped in pockets all over the city.  Mother called me to her room and told me about the  bodies of Muslim patients who were lying in Kalighat and could not be taken to the Muslim place of burial.  She needed my father’s help.  My dad at the time was a colonel in the army.  I rang Dad and told him the problem and he came over immediately…Mother and I went to my parents’ home at Fort William, where Dad changed into his army uniform and got a contingent of army vehicles to accompany us to Kalighat.  We spent the day taking the bodies of the Muslim patients to their burial place and the bodies of the Hindu patients to the burning ghats.

We then went to the Fatima Shrine.  There Father Henry was saying Mass while the slums around the area were burning, and Christian people who had no home were huddled in the shrine.  I remember Mother running up to the altar and whispering to Father Henry to finish Mass, while Dad and I and the rest of the army personnel helped the Christian people into the trucks, and we took them to a shelter on Lower Circular Road…I have never been so afraid and so exhilarated at the same time.  There was fire all around us.  Masses of burning Molotov cocktails were being hurled down the streets, and we, with hundreds of men, women, and children, were trying to survive.  I was just a young novice, but I saw that, while Calcutta burned with hatred, there was Mother Teresa helping the Muslim, the Hindu, and the Christian.  Her love for her neighbor knew no bounds.  Mother never forgot that day, and whenever she spoke to me about Dad, she would recall the horror of that day and the lives we saved.”

Stories I hear from the Middle East and from Nigeria make me wonder what I would do if religious war or life-threatening religious persecution came to central Kentucky.  This story, from testimony given for Mother Teresa’s canonization, gives me pause. How courageous to live my faith would I be?

1 & 2 Maccabees

This week’s first readings come from 1 and 2 Maccabees.  They are historical narratives around the Jewish struggles with Greek domination about a hundred years before Christ.  The Greeks, though pagan, considered their religion superior to Jewish faith.  They attempted to force compliance with their practices, and they profaned and tore down the temple in Jerusalem.  The Maccabeus brothers led a revolt, and threw off the Greeks for a while.  However, there was no sense of a “return” of Jewish rule. 

Today’s reading sets the stage.  The sentences in it that give me pause are:

“Then the king wrote to his whole kingdom that all should be one people, each abandoning his particular customs.  All the Gentiles conformed to the command of the king, and many children of Israel were in favor of his religion; they sacrificed to idols and profaned the sabbath….Terrible affliction was upon Israel.”

Reading those words, praying and thinking from those words, I come to the question:  What of my Christian faith would I stand up for under life-threatening circumstances?

The Witness of the St. Mother Teresa Story

As I think and pray about that, the St. Mother Teresa story intrigues me.  At the core of the core of the core of St. Mother Teresa’s faith was an absolute fidelity to the teachings, the practices, and the structures of the Catholic Church.   Yet, equally core of the core of the core of her faith was her practice of “love your neighbor as yourself” in multiple life-threatening circumstances.

I’m pretty sure that Mother Teresa would have died a martyr to stand up for the Eucharist if she were called to do it.  But, she RISKED her life to save the lives of others many times.  And she SPENT her life to help others every day. Would I do that under fire?

Three of the documents of Vatican Council II focus on living Christian faith in a diverse world:  Unitatis Redintegratio is a Decree on Ecumenism;  Nostra Aetate is a Declaration on Relations with Other Religions; and Dignitatis Humanae is a Declaration on Religious Freedom.  All three are relatively short documents. 

Yet those three documents give us marching orders to live our faith as Mother Teresa did in today’s opening story:  live boldly, anchored solidly in our Faith, yet live with respect for different faiths and the people who practice them.

“I WANT TO SEE!”

I think God must truly want me to SEE something I do not see, because it seems this year I have drawn the lot to write again and again on stories of Jesus healing blindness.  We have the story of Bartimaeus again today.  Again I hear him say: “LORD, I WANT TO SEE.” 

I struggle to SEE HOW to walk a path of integrity within our pluralistic world, standing as strong in my faith as the Maccabeus brothers were, yet also being as self-giving and accepting of those who see matters of faith or morals differently as St. Mother Teresa.   

“Lord, I want to see.”

More Guidance

In another St. Mother Teresa book I found this quote from her:

“I was invited last year to China, and one of the Chinese talk people asked, “And what is a communist to you?”  And I said, “A child of God, my brother, my sister.”  And nobody had another word to say.  Nobody. Perfect silence.  The next day in all the communist papers, “Mother Teresa says, ‘A  communist is a child of God, my brother, my sister.’”  And I didn’t tell a lie and it is true, because the same loving hand created you, created me, created that man in the street.  And it is there where love must be shown.”

Prayer

Lord, is there a way to make me an instrument of Your Truth and an instrument of your Peace at the same time?  How do I stand up for You in all circumstances, yet also love those who see things differently—who even may persecute or harm You or me?  How do I do that with humility and hospitality?  LORD, I WANT TO SEE! Even if all around me were to burn with hatred, let me live your Love.

NOTE: First Mother Teresa quote was from A Call to Mercy: Hearts to Love, Hands to Serve. Ed. by Brian Kolodiejchuk, MC, New York: Image Books, 2016, p 117-118.

Second Mother Teresa quote from Love: A Fruit Always in Season: Daily Meditations by Mother Teresa. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1987, p 134.

About the Author

Mary Ortwein lives in Frankfort, Kentucky in the US. A convert to Catholicism in 1969, Mary had a deeper conversion in 2010. She earned a theology degree from St. Meinrad School of Theology in 2015. Now an Oblate of St. Meinrad, Mary takes as her model Anna, who met the Holy Family in the temple at the Presentation. Like Anna, Mary spends time praying, working in church settings, and enjoying the people she meets. Though formally retired, Mary continues to work part-time as a marriage and family therapist and therapy supervisor. A grandmother and widow, she divides the rest of her time between facilitating small faith-sharing groups, writing, and being with family and friends. Earlier in her life, Mary worked avidly in the pro-life movement. In recent years that has taken the form of Eucharistic ministry to Carebound and educating about end-of-life matters. Now, as Respect for Human Life returns to center stage, she seeks to find ways to communicate God's love and Lordship for all--from the moment of conception through the moment we appear before Jesus when life ends.

Author Archive Page

11 Comments

  1. “Lord I want to see…” To see what You see, in me, and every person your
    loving hand has created. “A child of God, all of us brothers and sisters.”
    Very challenging and inspiring reflections and quotes from the scriptures
    and Mother Teresa…thank you for your thoughtful, graced words of
    spiritual Wisdom. Blessings for you and all your family, into the
    coming Thanksgiving – in faith and hope.

  2. I also want to love God with all my heart, my soul and my spirit, and my neighbour as myself, but I’m a long way from there. I pray Mother Theresa will intercede for us to grow in that love.

  3. With regard to Saint Mother Theresa’s life’s quest of loving her neighbors as she loved herself the Holy Spirit came upon me and kept saying that we needed to come to understand what it means to “love yourself” before they can love others. He mentioned that we need to separate love into two types, earthly and spiritual, and then focus on spiritual love for ourselves (when we do that our love of earthly “loves” will go away). Only when we understand spiritual love of ourselves will we understand how we are to love “others as ourselves” as Jesus stated in the 2nd commandment. He seemed to be strongly suggesting that Spiritual love of ourselves means to become Christlike in our earthly walk. When that happens then we won’t want our neighbors to perform any sinful acts because we wouldn’t want that for ourselves. Therefore, according to the Spirit, we should always strive not to give our neighbors an opportunity to want to say or do something sinful in our presence by what we say or do in their presence.

  4. Thank you Mary. How far would I go? A question we can only answer when the Lord calls. One thing I’m sure of is at that moment your faith will be tested. I pray I pass the test. Wonderful reflection for readings that ask questions of all us. Blessings dear Mary.

  5. How powerful when Mother Theresa said the Communists were children of God and loved by him. Praying my heart can be open and I can ”see” all as children God loves. Thank you for your reflection.

  6. Dear Mary, SEE ! God knew who to chose for this reflection:) You blew it out of the park. I have for several years struggled over the political divide that is revolutionized our world: friends against friends, families torn apart, even the hoarding of toilet paper! We in our own neighbourhoods are surrounded by some form of blazing hatred. Your reference to Mother Teresa’s words and your way of questioning is an example of spiritually defending Gods faith. Thanks also for a great Christmas reflection book to share with friends.

  7. Mother Teresa. “ Silence is Prayer
    Prayer is faith
    Faith is love
    Love is service
    Service is the fruit of Peace”

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