D
Don_Ruggero
Guest
I have to say that, for those who knew Mother and knew her mission, this is offensive. Incidental that the saris are inexpensive? “Dress for the job,” you say? Is that what you say of the words of Jesus to Mother in 1947?Side with them?
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It really is incidental that these sarees are inexpensive. They are inexpensive because the sisters love the poor and want to devote their resources to the poor, not because they are worried about how much they cost.
The saree itself signifies the riches of God’s mercy. So while it’s not properly called ostentatious, it is deeply expressive. And it’s part of their mission to “dress for the job”.
There are many orders who have cast off this type of uniquely expressive dress.
*In September 1946 Mother Teresa was sent for her annual retreat to the Loreto Convent in Darjeeling. During this train journey, on September 10, 1946, she had a mystical encounter with Christ. In this encounter, which Mother later referred to as the ‘call within a call’, Christ urged her to give up all and follow Him into the slums to serve Him in the poorest of the poor. “Come be my light,” He commanded, “I cannot go alone - they don’t know me, so they don’t want me. Go amongst them, carry me with you into them…”
Mother then began receiving a series of interior locutions, in which she was really hearing the voice of Jesus and intimately conversing with Him, that continued until the middle of the following year. In one of these visions she had in 1947 Jesus said to her, “I want Indian nuns, victims of My love, who would be Mary and Martha, who would be so very united to Me as to radiate My love on souls. I want free nuns covered with My poverty of the Cross. … You will dress in simple Indian clothes or rather like My Mother dressed - simple and poor. … Your sari will become holy because it will be My symbol.”
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However, when her pupils finally saw Mother in her sari after she had returned from her medical training in Patna, their initial reaction was that of shock. Magdalena Polton, who later became Sr. Gertrude, the second nun to join the Missionaries of Charity, recollects her first meeting with Mother in her new religious dress, “It was the 26th of April, 1949, the day I had myself come to join Mother. When I arrived, Mother was not at home. She came after midday and it was then that for the very first time in my life I saw her in her white sari with three blue borders. And what a shock it was for me - Mother Teresa, a Loreto nun, my Headmistress was now dressed like a poor Bengali woman in a simple white cotton sari with three blue borders!"
In the early days the saris used to be bought from Harrison Road near Howrah. In fact, the first two saris of Mother that Father van Exem blessed were also bought from there. Sr. Gertrude, who accompanied Mother to purchase 11 pairs of three-striped handloom saris from Harrison Road before the day Mother was to make her Final Profession and the first group of 10 sisters their First Profession, remembers the rows of shops lining the pavements on both sides selling these saris. “The saris that used to be sold there usually had borders of red, green and blue,” she recollects, “Mother selected the blue border, for we associate the colour blue with Mother Mary. It stands for purity. Also in those days women who swept the streets used to wear a similar kind of a sari. So Mother adopted a religious dress that was both symbolic and practical - it not only helped to identify ourselves with the poor but was also suitable to Calcutta’s searing climate. The saris, I think, cost about Rs. 2.50 each and we used to buy a pair for each one of us.”
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Mother Teresa’s inspiration to adopt the white sari with three blue borders as the religious dress of the Missionaries of Charity and wear it in the true Bengali style was thus inspired by Jesus’ Words. It was a choice led by God.
Heartfelt gratitude to Sr. Gertrude, M.C. (who was the 2nd to join Mother Teresa and who went home to Jesus in 2015.12.05.) for her help with writing this feature.
motherteresa.org/08_info/Sari.html
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So, positively no to what you allege: it is not “incidental” that the saris are inexpensive…it was exactly why they were chosen.
I remember once, the sisters were taking possession of a house and were removing from it anything they deemed contravening their radical poverty…even a poor throw rug. When they saw their beds, they rejected the netting as a “finery”…until after the first night, when they made the horrific discovery that the netting was indeed not ornamental. It was allowed to come back the next day. They live the virtue of poverty in a heroic manner.