Author Topic: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest  (Read 455 times)

Miss Deborah

  • Barbarians
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6396
    • View Profile
Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« on: January 10, 2012, 07:16:24 PM »
Tainted Saint: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
A A A Comments By Peter Jamison Wednesday, Jan 11 2012
San Francisco Weekly


Illustration by Robert Hunt.

The death of journalist and polemicist Christopher Hitchens last month gave those familiar with his work a chance to revisit one of his more controversial subjects: the Albanian nun Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, better known to the world as Mother Teresa. In his 1997 book, The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice, Hitchens argued that the "Saint of Calcutta," who founded and headed the international Missionaries of Charity order, enjoyed undeserved esteem.
Mother Teresa with Father Donald McGuire, a convicted child molester who ministered to her nuns.
Courtesy Tyrone Cefalu
Mother Teresa with Father Donald McGuire, a convicted child molester who ministered to her nuns.
An unsigned letter that appears to have been written by Mother Teresa asks McGuire’s superiors to overlook an abuse allegation against the priest.
An unsigned letter that appears to have been written by Mother Teresa asks McGuire’s superiors to overlook an abuse allegation against the priest.

Despite her humanitarian reputation and 1979 Nobel Peace Prize, Mother Teresa had set up a worldwide system of "homes for the dying" that routinely failed to provide adequate care to patients, Hitchens argued — an appraisal shared by The Lancet, a respected medical journal. Mother Teresa also associated with, and took large sums of money from, disreputable figures such as American savings-and-loan swindler Charles Keating and the dictatorial Duvalier family of Haiti.

Notwithstanding these black marks on an otherwise sterling reputation, Mother Teresa — who died in 1997 and is now on the fast track to a formal proclamation of sainthood by the Vatican — was never known to have been touched by the scandal that would rock the Roman Catholic Church in the decade after her death: the systematic protection of child-molesting priests by church officials.

Yet documents obtained by SF Weekly suggest that Mother Teresa knew one of her favorite priests was removed from ministry for sexually abusing a Bay Area boy in 1993, and that she nevertheless urged his bosses to return him to work as soon as possible. The priest resumed active ministry, as well as his predatory habits. Eight additional complaints were lodged against him in the coming years by various families, leading to his eventual arrest on sex-abuse charges in 2005.

The priest was Donald McGuire, a former Jesuit who has been convicted of molesting boys in federal and state courts and is serving a 25-year federal prison sentence. McGuire, now 81 years old, taught at the University of San Francisco in the late 1970s, and held frequent spiritual retreats for families in San Francisco and Walnut Creek throughout the 1980s and 1990s. He also ministered extensively to the Missionaries of Charity during that time.

In a 1994 letter to McGuire's Jesuit superior in Chicago, it appears that Mother Teresa acknowledged she had learned of the "sad events which took [McGuire] from his priestly ministry these past seven months," and that McGuire "admitted imprudence in his behavior," but she wished to see him put back on the job. The letter was written after McGuire had been sent to a psychiatric hospital following an abuse complaint to the Jesuits by a family in Walnut Creek.

"I understand how grave is the scandal touching the priesthood in the U.S.A. and how careful we must be to guard the purity and reputation of that priesthood," the letter states. "I must say, however, that I have confidence and trust in Fr. McGuire and wish to see his vital ministry resume as soon as possible."

The one-page letter comes from thousands of pages of church records that have been shared with plaintiffs' attorneys in ongoing litigation against the Jesuits involving McGuire. (The documents were also shared with prosecutors who worked on his criminal cases.) It is printed on Missionaries of Charity letterhead but is unsigned, and thus cannot be verified absolutely as having been written by Mother Teresa. Officials in the Missionaries of Charity and the Jesuits did not respond to requests for comment on its provenance.

Yet statements throughout the letter point to Mother Teresa as the author. The writer speaks of "my communities throughout the world" and refers by name to Mother Teresa's four top deputies, calling them "my four assistants." Rev. Joseph Fessio, a Jesuit and former University of San Francisco professor who knew Mother Teresa, said the reference to her assistants is an "authentic" aspect of the letter.

The letter could have an impact on the near-complete process of canonizing Mother Teresa. In 2003 she was beatified by Pope John Paul II, the penultimate step to full sainthood.

"What we see here is the same thing we see over and over in regard to the [priest pedophilia] scandal — the complete lack of empathy for, or interest in, possible victims of these accused priests," said Anne Rice, the bestselling author of novels including Interview with the Vampire and a former Catholic who has been outspoken in her criticism of the church's handling of the sex-abuse scandal. "In this letter the concern is for the reputation of the priesthood. This is as disappointing as it is shocking."

Other documents that have emerged in the criminal and civil cases involving McGuire could affect the sainthood prospects of another deceased religious leader eyed by the Vatican for sainthood. Among the newly uncovered church records are letters by Rev. John Hardon, a Jesuit who also worked extensively with Mother Teresa and died in 2000. He collaborated with then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, on the Catechism of the Catholic Church, a landmark summation of contemporary church doctrine. In 2005, the Vatican opened a formal inquiry into whether Hardon should be made a saint.

Article continues @

http://www.sfweekly.com/2012-01-11/news/mother-teresa-catholic-church-john-hardon-donald-mcguire-child-abuse-jesuits/


loa

  • Global Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 4002
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #1 on: January 10, 2012, 08:37:44 PM »
That's a disappointing thing to see.    If the letter was not signed, then what means did they use to determine it was written by M. Teresa?   

One thing that I don't think is well understood about pedophiles is that their recidivism rate is off the charts.  I think many of them talk a great game and con people into thinking they are done with their bad behavior,  even when they have no intention of stopping. 

K.
It's a pink flamingo sort of day!

Brian Sodding Boru4

  • The Inner Court
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 2274
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #2 on: January 11, 2012, 03:56:30 AM »
The letter is distressing, but hardly surprising.  All throughout the clergy sex scandal, the Church hierarchy and rank-and-file have seen it as more appropriate to defend the perpetrators than the victims.  One could easily make the argument that Mother Teresa was being a good Catholic, just not a very good human being.

Boru
'Tantum religio potuit suadere malorum.' - Lucretius

rae

  • The Inner Court
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 1278
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #3 on: January 11, 2012, 06:33:01 AM »
I don't know that there was enough information about how to deal with pedophiles at that time either... It was such a taboo subject that I would imagine the mindset was to remove them from the immediate temptation and try to forget about it in hopes that it went away

Miss Deborah

  • Barbarians
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6396
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #4 on: January 11, 2012, 10:56:28 AM »
I have mixed feelings about Mother Teresa. 

I'm sure she had some good intentions but I always wondered if she didn't NEED the pain of others to justify her own existence and, what we now know, were in doubts in her god. 

These events transpired in 1993 I believe that by that time a lot of information was available on peds and the lasting effects of their actions against children.  All throughout the 80's even American schools were teaching children about Stranger Danger. 

rae

  • The Inner Court
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 1278
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #5 on: January 11, 2012, 11:05:33 AM »
The incidents may have happened in 93 but she probably would have been of the other mindset due to her age... I just have a hard time accepting that she would have done it as a 'cover up' ...it doesn't seem to go along with her mindset


Miss Deborah

  • Barbarians
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6396
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #6 on: January 11, 2012, 11:21:15 AM »
The incidents may have happened in 93 but she probably would have been of the other mindset due to her age... I just have a hard time accepting that she would have done it as a 'cover up' ...it doesn't seem to go along with her mindset

I can't pretend to know the mind of another.  So her intentions will remain unknown.  Yet, I can't believe that during her lifetime she didn't encounter children who had been sexually abused and women who had been raped and viewed their pain first hand. Based on that I would challenge that she was ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation.

fivegallon

  • Guest
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #7 on: January 11, 2012, 11:41:26 AM »
The incidents may have happened in 93 but she probably would have been of the other mindset due to her age... I just have a hard time accepting that she would have done it as a 'cover up' ...it doesn't seem to go along with her mindset

I can't pretend to know the mind of another.  So her intentions will remain unknown.  Yet, I can't believe that during her lifetime she didn't encounter children who had been sexually abused and women who had been raped and viewed their pain first hand. Based on that I would challenge that she was ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation.

Deb, I hear what you are saying but consider this,  a lot of people were at one time "ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation" and not just religous people.  How many times have we heard of the stories of "strange Uncle Joe"?  I really do not think that she was ignorant of what happened but was of the generation that looked the other way.  I really don't see this as just a religous thing.

Miss Deborah

  • Barbarians
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6396
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #8 on: January 11, 2012, 11:45:53 AM »
The incidents may have happened in 93 but she probably would have been of the other mindset due to her age... I just have a hard time accepting that she would have done it as a 'cover up' ...it doesn't seem to go along with her mindset

I can't pretend to know the mind of another.  So her intentions will remain unknown.  Yet, I can't believe that during her lifetime she didn't encounter children who had been sexually abused and women who had been raped and viewed their pain first hand. Based on that I would challenge that she was ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation.

Deb, I hear what you are saying but consider this,  a lot of people were at one time "ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation" and not just religous people.  How many times have we heard of the stories of "strange Uncle Joe"?  I really do not think that she was ignorant of what happened but was of the generation that looked the other way.  I really don't see this as just a religous thing.

What I'm reading here opposed to other threads regarding The Catholic Church and their long history of pedophilia and cover ups is that no one defended the Church yet it appears to me that Mother Teresa is being given a free pass. 

If my take on this discussion to this point is wrong I'll be glad to consider other intent.

fivegallon

  • Guest
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #9 on: January 11, 2012, 11:56:22 AM »
The incidents may have happened in 93 but she probably would have been of the other mindset due to her age... I just have a hard time accepting that she would have done it as a 'cover up' ...it doesn't seem to go along with her mindset

I can't pretend to know the mind of another.  So her intentions will remain unknown.  Yet, I can't believe that during her lifetime she didn't encounter children who had been sexually abused and women who had been raped and viewed their pain first hand. Based on that I would challenge that she was ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation.

Deb, I hear what you are saying but consider this,  a lot of people were at one time "ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation" and not just religous people.  How many times have we heard of the stories of "strange Uncle Joe"?  I really do not think that she was ignorant of what happened but was of the generation that looked the other way.  I really don't see this as just a religous thing.

What I'm reading here opposed to other threads regarding The Catholic Church and their long history of pedophilia and cover ups is that no one defended the Church yet it appears to me that Mother Teresa is being given a free pass. 

If my take on this discussion to this point is wrong I'll be glad to consider other intent.

As a former Catholic I have never defended the Catholic Church nor is that my intent here.  I personally knew a few of the people that were molested here in Louisville as they came forward when the scandal broke.  I commend them for it, as it took a lot of courage to do so.

Again, I understand what you are saying, but you are comparing the entire Catholic Church to one woman.  I agree with Rae's take that her advanced age played a part and adding to that, the generation she was a part of as I stated above.  Yes, she should have reported it, I agree with you on that point but to compare an 80 year old woman to an entire religion with younger people knowing what went on is just not fair in my opinion.  I don't feel that I am giving her a free pass.

loa

  • Global Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 4002
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #10 on: January 11, 2012, 01:34:24 PM »
I don't think I'm trying to give Mother Teresa a pass - I think it's hard for me to wrap my head around why individual people do things, so I am always looking for a rational explanation.   

I will say though, it is easier for me to imagine institutions acting poorly, simply because of their nature and structure. 

K.
It's a pink flamingo sort of day!

Miss Deborah

  • Barbarians
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6396
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #11 on: January 11, 2012, 02:08:38 PM »
The incidents may have happened in 93 but she probably would have been of the other mindset due to her age... I just have a hard time accepting that she would have done it as a 'cover up' ...it doesn't seem to go along with her mindset

I can't pretend to know the mind of another.  So her intentions will remain unknown.  Yet, I can't believe that during her lifetime she didn't encounter children who had been sexually abused and women who had been raped and viewed their pain first hand. Based on that I would challenge that she was ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation.

Deb, I hear what you are saying but consider this,  a lot of people were at one time "ignorant of the pain of rape and molestation" and not just religous people.  How many times have we heard of the stories of "strange Uncle Joe"?  I really do not think that she was ignorant of what happened but was of the generation that looked the other way.  I really don't see this as just a religous thing.

What I'm reading here opposed to other threads regarding The Catholic Church and their long history of pedophilia and cover ups is that no one defended the Church yet it appears to me that Mother Teresa is being given a free pass. 

If my take on this discussion to this point is wrong I'll be glad to consider other intent.

As a former Catholic I have never defended the Catholic Church nor is that my intent here.  I personally knew a few of the people that were molested here in Louisville as they came forward when the scandal broke.  I commend them for it, as it took a lot of courage to do so.

Again, I understand what you are saying, but you are comparing the entire Catholic Church to one woman.  I agree with Rae's take that her advanced age played a part and adding to that, the generation she was a part of as I stated above.  Yes, she should have reported it, I agree with you on that point but to compare an 80 year old woman to an entire religion with younger people knowing what went on is just not fair in my opinion.  I don't feel that I am giving her a free pass.

She wasn't 80 years old in 1993.

She was a sophisticated woman who knew how to raise money and as there was never an audit of how the money was spent and the facts that the facility in Calcutta which was the focus point of asking for donations never did appear to have money vested in it and the fact that she opened about 100 convents across the world in her name makes me question how much was myth and how much was reality. 

I don't buy the idea that she was too old and of such a different age to know how the world worked.  She managed to entangle herself in political issues in other countries so it's not like she lived within the walls of that clinic in Calcutta never exposed to the world.

fivegallon

  • Guest
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #12 on: January 11, 2012, 02:17:48 PM »
Quote
She wasn't 80 years old in 1993.

You are right, she was not 80 years old, she was 83, born in 1910.

Quote
She was a sophisticated woman who knew how to raise money and as there was never an audit of how the money was spent and the facts that the facility in Calcutta which was the focus point of asking for donations never did appear to have money vested in it and the fact that she opened about 100 convents across the world in her name makes me question how much was myth and how much was reality.
 

I never addressed that part of her life, only the title of the thread.  I have questioned many things that the Catholic Chruch has done.

Quote
I don't buy the idea that she was too old and of such a different age to know how the world worked.  She managed to entangle herself in political issues in other countries so it's not like she lived within the walls of that clinic in Calcutta never exposed to the world.

Deb, come on!  That is not even close to what I said.  I stated that she was of the generation that avoided these types of things, that turned a blind eye to them.  You know the "strange Uncle Joe".  I never stated anything resembling what you said.

Miss Deborah

  • Barbarians
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6396
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #13 on: January 11, 2012, 02:41:48 PM »
[quote author=fivegallon link=topic=8249.msg85004#msg85004
Deb, come on!  That is not even close to what I said.  I stated that she was of the generation that avoided these types of things, that turned a blind eye to them.  You know the "strange Uncle Joe".  I never stated anything resembling what you said.

[/quote]

I simply don't buy that.  If it makes you feel good to be an apologist for Mother Teresa then by all means continue to do so.

Miss Deborah

  • Barbarians
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6396
    • View Profile
Re: Mother Teresa Defended Pedophile Priest
« Reply #14 on: January 11, 2012, 02:42:50 PM »
The squalid truth behind the legacy of Mother Teresa

Donal MacIntyre

Published 22 August 2005

The nun adored by the Vatican ran a network of care homes where cruelty and neglect are routine. Donal MacIntyre gained secret access and witnessed at first hand the suffering of "rescued" orphans

The dormitory held about 30 beds rammed in so close that there was hardly a breath of air between the bare metal frames. Apart from shrines and salutations to "Our Great Mother", the white walls were bare. The torch swept across the faces of children sleeping, screaming, laughing and sobbing, finally resting on the hunched figure of a boy in a white vest. Distressed, he rocked back and forth, his ankle tethered to his cot like a goat in a farmyard. This was the Daya Dan orphanage for children aged six months to 12 years, one of Mother Teresa's flagship homes in Kolkata. It was 7.30 in the evening, and outside the monsoon rains fell unremittingly.

Earlier in the day, young international volunteers had giggled as one told how a young boy had peed on her while strapped to a bed. I had already been told of an older disturbed woman tied to a tree at another Missionaries of Charity home. At the orphanage, few of the volunteers batted an eyelid at disabled children being tied up. They were too intoxicated with the myth of Mother Teresa and drunk on their own philanthropy to see that such treatment of children was inhumane and degrading.

Mother Teresa founded the Missionaries of Charity in 1950 in Kolkata, answering her own calling to "serve the poorest of the poor". In 1969, a documentary about her work with the poor catapulted her to global celebrity. International awards fol-lowed, including the Nobel Peace Prize and a Congressional Gold Medal. But when, in her Nobel acceptance speech, she described abortion as "the greatest destroyer of peace today" she started to provoke controversy. She died on 5 September 1997, her name attached to some 60 centres worldwide, and India honoured her with a state funeral. Her seven homes for the poor and destitute of Kolkata, however, are her lasting monument.

I worked undercover for a week in Mother Teresa's flagship home for disabled boys and girls to record Mother Teresa's Legacy, a special report for Five News broadcast earlier this month. I winced at the rough handling by some of the full-time staff and Missionary sisters. I saw children with their mouths gagged open to be given medicine, their hands flaying in distress, visible testimony to the pain they were in. Tiny babies were bound with cloths at feeding time. Rough hands wrenched heads into position for feeding. Some of the children retched and coughed as rushed staff crammed food into their mouths. Boys and girls were abandoned on open toilets for up to 20 minutes at a time. Slumped, untended, some dribbling, some sleeping, they were a pathetic sight. Their treatment was an affront to their dignity, and dangerously unhygienic.

Volunteers (from Italy, Sweden, the United States and the UK) did their best to cradle and wash the children who had soiled themselves. But there were no nappies, and only cold water. Soap and disinfectant were in short supply. Workers washed down beds with dirty water and dirty cloths. Food was prepared on the floor in the corridor. A senior member of staff mixed medicine with her hands. Some did their best to give love and affection - at least some of the time. But, for the most part, the care the children received was inept, unprofessional and, in some cases, rough and dangerous. "They seem to be warehousing people rather than caring for them," commented the former operations director of Mencap Martin Gallagher, after viewing our undercover footage.

I first learned of the plight of the Kolkata children from two international aid workers, both qualified nurses and committed Catholics. They came to me after working as volunteers for the Missionaries of Charity last Christmas. Both made the comparison with images that emerged from Romanian orphanages in the early 1990s after television news teams first gained access.

"I was shocked. I could only work there [Daya Dan] for three days. It was simply too distressing. . . We had seen the same things in Romania but couldn't believe it was happening in a Mother Teresa home," one told me. In January, she and her colleague had written to Sister Nirmala, the new Mother Superior, to voice their concerns. They wrote, they told me, out of "compassion and not complaint", but received no response. Like me, they had been brought up in Catholic schools to believe that Mother Teresa was the holiest of all women, second only to the Virgin Mary. Our faith was unwavering, as was that of the international media for about 50 years. Even when the sister in charge of the Missionaries of Charity's Mahatma Gandhi Welfare Centre in Kolkata was prosecuted and found guilty of burning a young girl of seven with a hot knife in 2000, criticism remained muted.

The most significant challenge to the reputation of Mother Teresa came from Christopher Hitchens in 1995 in his book The Missionary Position. "Only the absence of scrutiny has allowed her to pass unchallenged as a force for pure goodness, and it is high time that this suspension of our critical faculties was itself suspended," he wrote, questioning whether the poor in her homes were denied basic treatment in the belief that suffering brought them closer to God. Hitchens's lonely voice also raised the issue of the order's finances, which in 1995 (and still in July 2005 when we were filming) seemed never to reach Kolkata's poorest.

Susan Shields, formerly a senior nun with the order, recalled that one year there was roughly $50m in the bank account held by the New York office alone. Much of the money, she complained, sat in banks while workers in the homes were obliged to reuse blunt needles. The order has stopped reusing needles, but the poor care remains pervasive. One nurse told me of a case earlier this year where staff knew a patient had typhoid but made no effort to protect volunteers or other patients. "The sense was that God will provide and if the worst happens - it is God's will."

The Kolkata police force and the city's social welfare department have promised to investigate the incidents in the Daya Dan home when they have seen and verified the distressing footage we secretly filmed. Dr Aroup Chatterjee, a London-based Kolkata-born doctor, believes that if Daya Dan were any other care home in India, "the authorities would close it down. The Indian government is in thrall to the legacy of Mother Teresa and is terrified of her reputation and status. There are many better homes than this in Kolkata," he told us.

Nearly eight years after her death, Mother Teresa is fast on the way to sainthood. The great aura of myth that surrounds her is built on her great deeds helping the poor and the destitute of Kolkata, birthplace of her order, the Missionaries of Charity. Rarely has one individual so convinced public opinion of the holiness of her cause. Her reward is accelerated canonisation.

But her homes are a disgrace to so-called Christian care and, indeed, civilised values of any kind. I witnessed barbaric treatment of the most vulnerable.

The Missionaries of Charity have said that they welcome constructive criticism, and that the children we saw were tied for their own safety and for "educational purposes". Sister Nirmala even welcomed our film: "Our hopes continue to be simply to provide immediate and effective service to the poorest of the poor as long as they have no one to help them . . . May God bless you and your efforts to promote the dignity of human life, especially for those who are underprivileged."

For too long Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity have been blessing critics, rather than addressing justified and damning condemnations of the serious failings in their care practices.

Donal MacIntyre is a reporter and documentary-maker for Channel 5 Television