The Missionary Position: Ideology of Mother Teresa
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Synopsis
"Who would be so base as to pick on a wizened, shrivelled old lady, well stricken in years, who has consecrated her entire life to the needy and destitute? On the other hand, who would be so incurious as to leave unexamined the influence and motives of a woman who once boasted of operating more than five hundred convents in upwards of 105 countries - "without counting India"? Lone self-sacrificing zealot, or chair of a missionary multinational?" Recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, feted by politicians, the Church and the world's media, Mother Teresa of Calcutta appears to be on the fast track to sainthood. But what, asks Christopher Hitchens, makes Mother Teresa so divine? In a frank expose of the Teresa cult, Hitchens details the nature and limits of one woman's mission to the world's poor. He probes the source of the heroic status bestowed upon an Albanian nun whose only declared wish is to serve God. He asks whether Mother Teresa's good works answer any higher purpose than the need of the world's privileged to see someone, somewhere, doing something for the Third World. He unmasks pseudo-miracles, questions Mother Teresa's fitness to adjudicate on matters of sex and reproduction, and reports on a version of saintly ubiquity which affords genial relations with dictators, corrupt tycoons and convicted frauds. How should we relate to Mother? As an essential salve to the conscience of the rich West, or an expert PR machine for the Catholic Church? In its caustic iconoclasm and unsparing wit, The Missionary Position confirms Christopher Hitchens as one of today's most devastating polemicists.
Book details
Published
06/10/1995
Publisher
Verso Books
ISBN
9781859840542
Publisher and industry reviews
UK Kirkus review
Arguably this was the most controversial book of 1995 - a devastating critique of the life and achievements of Mother Teresa. Hitchens shows, with incontrovertible evidence, that while Mother Teresa may or may not have been saintlike, she was naive to the point of cruelty ('comforting' a dying cancer patient in terrible pain, she asserted that 'Jesus is kissing you'. 'Then I wish he'd stop,' said the patient.) The author asserts Mother Teresa accepted money unquestioningly from extremely dubious sources and positively refused to spend it on proper medical treatment or drugs, preferring to use it to forward the fight against birth control. A violently interesting and provocative essay. (Kirkus UK)
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