The Malta Independent on Sunday

Mother Teresa’s dubious ‘miracles’

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Two dubious “miracles” have been ascribed to the “interventi­on” of the dead Mother Teresa. The first miracle allegedly took place in the Bengali village of Raigunj where a woman called Monica Besra was cured of cancer.

Dr Manju Murshed, the superinten­dent of the local hospital, and Dr T.K. Biswas and his gynaecolog­ist colleague Dr Ranjan Mustafi all came forward to say that Mrs Besra had been suffering from tuberculos­is and an ovarian growth and that she had been successful­ly treated for both affliction­s (Aroup Chatterjee, Mother Teresa: The Final Verdict).

The hospital superinten­dent declared that he was annoyed at the numerous calls he had received from Mother Teresa’s religious order, pressing him to say that the cure had been “miraculous”.

Mrs Besra herself proved an unreliable witness to the alleged “miracle”. During her interview, she talked at high speed because, as she put it, she “might otherwise forget”, and she begged to be excused questions because she might have to “remember”.

Her husband insisted that she had been cured by ordinary, regular medical treatment.

The second dubious “miracle”, involving a Brazilian man, was based on a generaliza­tion by the Vatican’s medical commission regarding the presentday lack of medical knowledge to explain the man’s recovery.

Just like in the Dark Ages, the Church is always ready to fill gaps in knowledge with superstiti­ous beliefs. It ascribes the healing of a living man to the “interventi­on” of a dead woman who, in her own private letters, had revealed that “for the last 50 years of her life felt no presence of God whatsoever”, and that she had her own doubts about the existence of God ( Time magazine, 23 August, 2007). John Guillaumie­r St Julian’s

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