“I saw that in Calcutta. (ItƵapp) the same thing here,” she said.
When Blessed TeresaƵapp relics visited Winnipeg July 21, people drove hours to be there in one of the poorest, most dangerous neighbourhoods in Canada. Eight-hundred people filled WinnipegƵapp Holy Ghost parish — even though the Winnipeg visit was a last-minute surprise and Holy Ghost pastor Fr. Maciej Pajak had no chance to get the word out.
People who showed up weren’t indulging in blind, emotional piety, said Pajak. Most of the visitors were regular collaborators with the Missionaries of Charity, Mother TeresaƵapp sisters who serve the poor from a house in PajakƵapp parish.
Worldwide tributes to Mother TeresaCommunities around the world will be celebrating Mother TeresaƵapp 100th birthday on Aug. 26. Here are some of the celebrations planned.
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Pajak can see harsh reality of poverty across the street.
“Around the church and around the sisters we have prostitutes, gangs, drug dealers who are living just across the street from the church,” he said.
People came to visit with Mother TeresaƵapp relics and remember her before the 100th anniversary of her birth Aug. 26 because they believe in the humanity of the poor and the abandoned, said Pajak.
Like most Canadians, Tess Ocol doesn’t need to be convinced that Mother Teresa is a saint. Official canonization is a long process, but Ocol calls her a saint now.
OcolƵapp experience of volunteering with the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta in 2002 changed her life. Before her brief three months of mornings in Daya Dan, a home for physically and intellectually disabled orphans, and afternoons in the Kalighat Home for the Dying, Ocol was a rising young management consultant. A downturn in the economy, a breathless read through City of Joy by Dominique Lapierre, followed by a gift of a book about Mother Teresa and a doctor friendƵapp plans to travel to Calcutta all combined to inspire Ocol to take a brief leave from her job and volunteer with the Missionaries of Charity.
Three months of helping the terminally ill to the toilet, washing and playing with disabled children, and OcolƵapp life was never the same.
She walked away from her career in management consulting, got a masters in international development, then began married life working for an NGO in Malawi.
“I wanted to do something related to poverty and social justice,” she said.
These days, Ocol is home in the Toronto suburb of Brampton caring for her two children. But she carries with her the lessons she learned from the sisters, and they learned from Mother Teresa — that what matters is small things done with great love.
“You would think that in the homes of the sisters there would be so much sadness. These are abandoned people. These are orphaned children with physical disabilities. ThatƵapp what I expected,” she said. “What surprised me was that actually there was so much joy in the homes.”
The children were joyful and the dying were peaceful.
Mother Teresa has plenty to say to rich, comfortable Canadians. She taught that the poverty of the West is worse than the poverty of developing countries, Ocol said.
“ItƵapp the poverty of loneliness and abandonment, which is so much in our country,” said Ocol.
And there is a solution.
“ItƵapp just little deeds done with great love, and you can put that in any context.”