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Wednesday, April 30
The Indiana Daily Student

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Thousands honor Mother Teresa

Pope John Paul II moves nun one step closer to sainthood

VATICAN CITY -- More than a quarter-million people -- rich and poor, royal and regular -- flooded St. Peter's Square Sunday for the beatification of Mother Teresa, honoring the nun who built shelters, orphanages and clinics around the world to care for those forsaken by everyone else.\nPope John Paul II presided over the open-air Mass but, for the first time in a major Vatican ceremony, was unable to utter a word of his homily, leaving other prelates to do so. In the few prayers he did say, his words were so slurred and shaky they could barely be understood.\nJohn Paul did declare Mother Teresa "blessed," moving the woman many called a living saint for her work in the slums of Calcutta one step closer to official sainthood -- and bestowing the honor during his 25th anniversary celebrations.\nIt has been a particularly grueling week for the ailing, 83-year-old pope, celebrating his anniversary Mass Thursday and gearing up for another lengthy ceremony Tuesday to install 30 new cardinals.\nThe Vatican estimated Sunday's crowd at 300,000 -- one of its largest ever -- and the ceremony was a colorful mix of Indian dance and sitar music with traditional Catholic hymns, reflecting the cultures in which Mother Teresa lived and worked.\n"In her, we perceive the urgency to put oneself in a state of service, especially for the poorest and most forgotten, the last of the last," John Paul said at the start of the service, held on a sunny Roman morning.\nSt. Peter's Square and the streets feeding into it overflowed with pilgrims, tourists and nuns of Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity order, grouped in small clusters of their trademark indigo-trimmed white saris alongside cardinals in scarlet cassocks and politicians in somber black.\nSome of the nuns wept, and others buried their heads in their hands when the smiling, wrinkled face of Mother Teresa was unveiled on a tapestry hanging from the facade of St. Peter's Basilica.\nJohn Paul himself appeared visibly moved as Indian girls bearing blue and white flowers performed an offertory Indian dance and accompanied a wooden reliquary containing a sample of Mother Teresa's blood to the altar.\nBeatification allows public veneration for holy people, so the relic -- blood on a piece of cotton inside the reliquary -- can go on display.\nIn the reserved seats closest to the altar sat representatives from 27 official delegations, including the presidents of Albania, Macedonia and Kosovo, Belgian Queen Fabiola and royalty from Liechtenstein, Romania and Jordan.\nAlso attending were Muslim and Orthodox Christian delegations from Albania, whose government declared a national holiday. Mother Teresa was born to an ethnic Albania family in the Macedonian capital, Skopje.\nSitting among them were about 2,000 homeless men and women who eat and sleep in soup kitchens and shelters run by Mother Teresa's followers. They were invited to a special luncheon inside a Vatican hall after the ceremony.\n"She gave me hope," said Mara Moarem, a 55-year-old Albanian immigrant who lives at Casa Serena, a Roman shelter run by the Missionaries of Charity. "I am Albanian, she was Albanian. She is my countrywoman," he said before the lunch of lasagna, chicken, peas and bananas.\nAlso on hand was Monica Besra, an Indian woman who the Vatican says was cured of a medically incurable abdominal tumor after praying to Mother Teresa -- the miracle it needed for beatification. Besra and her family embraced Catholicism after she recovered.\n"I was so sick, Mother prayed for me," she said a few days before the ceremony. "For that reason I became Catholic. This is my faith."\nThe ceremony was broadcast live to Missionaries of Charity orphanages and leprosy homes in India, where Mother Teresa founded her order. A special Mass was held at the modest building on a narrow Calcutta lane where Mother Teresa lived for most of her life and now houses her mission's headquarters. Dozens of nuns led the singing of hymns and prayers.\nBorn Agnes Gonxhe Bojaxhiu in 1910, Mother Teresa founded the Missionaries of Charity order in 1949, after what she called an inspiration from God to care for the world's most destitute and sick. With 703 houses in 132 countries, the religious order is considered to be the fastest growing in the Catholic Church.\nCritics have taken issue with Mother Teresa's faith-based advocacy against abortion and condoms in such an overpopulated and AIDS-stricken country as India, while others have faulted her for having accepted donations from dictators.\nAs her beatification neared, some in India protested the Vatican's claim of Besra's cure, saying talk of miracles insulted the saintly work Mother Teresa did every day and could encourage the poor to seek out religious gurus and quacks rather than going to doctors.\nJohn Paul waived the normal five-year waiting period for the beatification process to begin and launched it a year after Mother Teresa's 1997 death, convinced of her saintliness and apparently intent on at least beatifying her in his lifetime.\nThe Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk, the postulator or chief advocate for the beatification, said that by setting a Vatican record for beatification, John Paul was showing more than just his personal admiration for the tiny, stooped nun.\nHis desire to make her a new model for Catholics was "in some way to present Mother Teresa as one very prominent example of someone who in many respects lived some of the things he's been teaching in his pontificate," Kolodiejchuk said.\nWith Sunday's ceremony, John Paul has beatified 1,315 people and canonized 476 _ far more than his predecessors of the past 500 years combined. Mother Teresa needs a second miracle to be made a saint.\nThe pope's inability to deliver his homily Sunday was another sign of the toll taken by Parkinson's disease, which has robbed him of the ability to speak clearly and compounded other ailments that prevent him from walking or standing.

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