Iamsemisweet
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Teresa didn't so much love the poor as she loved poverty. The late, great Christopher Hitchens was asked to be the devil's advocate by the Church when Teresa was being considered for beatification. Here is an article about it: FORT WORTH - Christopher Hitchens is a rare bird these days. Not just because he's a British-born journalist who writes about American politics - as well as a contentious, left-wing contrarian who supports the war in Iraq. Mr. Hitchens has also played "devil's advocate" - against Mother Teresa. This would seem an outsized case of windmill-tilting and nose-thumbing. While she was alive, the Nobel Prize-winning nun often topped international polls as the most admired person on the planet. Last month, she was beatified by the Catholic Church - the second major step toward sainthood, after being found "venerable." Yet Mr. Hitchens testified against her - at the request of the church. A devil's advocate is not the Keanu Reeves character in an Al Pacino movie. When an individual is being considered by the church for sainthood, a "postulator" is appointed to make the case for that candidate. The devil's advocate, on the other hand, is the person who presents the evidence against sainthood. He's called that because, obviously, in trying to keep candidates out of the ranks of the saintly, he's like a corporate recruiter for the sinful side. But still, no demons, no pitchforks, no special effects. The advocatus diaboli, as he's called in Latin, is merely the opposing counsel, a prosecuting attorney with a flashy title. Officially, he's even known as the "Promoter of the Faith." It was an honorable position: Before he became Pope Benedict XIV (1740-58), Prospero Lamartini served in the post for 20 years. It was an honorable position: The church did away with it 20 years ago. Nonetheless, Mr. Hitchens was requested by the Vatican to bring evidence against Mother Teresa. That's as close as ordinary mortals get these days to donning the devil's robes in an ecclesiastical court. Mr. Hitchens was an obvious choice to raise hell. His 1995 book, The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice, aggressively attacked the famous nun's reputation as a selfless servant of the poor. He questioned her relationships with some unsavory global characters and the efficacy and purpose of her missionary work in Calcutta, India. (The iconoclastic Vanity Fair columnist was in Fort Worth last week working on a documentary about Texas that he's doing for Britain's Channel 4. The same TV company produced Hell's Angel, a documentary about Mother Teresa that he co-wrote.) In his book and documentary, Mr. Hitchens pointed out that Mother Teresa associated with (and applauded) the Duvalier clan, the dictators of Haiti. She accepted a donation of more than $1 million from Charles Keating Jr., the convicted savings-and-loan fraud. Paul Turley, the Los Angeles deputy district attorney in that case, sent her a letter stating that the money she received was not Mr. Keating's to give, that it was stolen from hundreds of small investors. Mother Teresa never returned it. On a broader level, Mr. Hitchens argued that Catholics and non-Catholics all over the world gave money to help Mother Teresa with her efforts among the poor and sick of Calcutta. But, he maintained, she and her order, the Missionaries of Charity, have not so much provided physical or medical aid as they have worked to convert the poor. The Lancet, the prestigious British medical journal, called the care dispensed at her Calcutta clinic "haphazard." "Her clinic is just as threadbare as when she began," Mr. Hitchens said in Fort Worth. "Yet she said with pride that she's built more than 500 convents in 125 countries." Mother Teresa was always candid that her goal was ministering to what she saw as the poor's spiritual needs and not their medical or economic ones. "We are not social workers," she once said. What was needed, she said, was more prayer, more faith. As for her association with what Mr. Hitchens termed "the corrupt and wordly rich," the Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk, the postulator in her case, has pointed out that Jesus himself sat down with Roman tax collectors. Many in the Catholic press have called Mr. Hitchens' charges "slurs" and even "bizarre." Bishop Salvadore Lobo of Baruipur, India, labeled Hell's Angel a "very distorted" depiction of the beloved nun and her work. The objections have often focused on Mr. Hitchens' vitriolic atheism. He's hardly impartial to religion: "I'm hostile to it," he told Free Inquiry magazine in 1996. "I think it is a positively bad idea, not just a false one. And I mean not just organized religion, but religious belief itself." But, Mr. Hitchens noted, no one has disproved his assertions about the Duvaliers, the Keating money or Mother Teresa's consistently ultra-conservative views. (She opposed the reforms of Vatican II, for example, and supported a proposed ban on divorce in Ireland while supporting Princess Diana's own divorce.) Still, he said, when it came to handling her beatification, Father Kolodiejchuk was "a fair-minded guy." Attempts to reach Father Kolodiejchuk, who was said to be traveling in Calcutta, were unsuccessful. Mr. Hitchens was one of several non-Catholics who testified - among hundreds of witnesses whose testimony filled some 34,200 pages of what is called the Acts of the Diocesan Inquiry. When he received his letter a few years ago from the Vatican asking for input, "I thought, terrific, because I thought I would go to Rome," Mr. Hitchens recalled. "Possibly even to the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which is in the old Inquisition office." Maybe he'd find a few leftover thumbscrews lying around. Mr. Hitchens said he'd even pay for the trip himself. But it turned out that his appearance was overseen by the Catholic archdiocese in his adoptive home, Washington, D.C. No plane trip, no thumbscrews. "It was just a taxi ride to Catholic University," Mr. Hitchens grumped. He can see the spire of the campus from his apartment. Under Pope John Paul II, the canonization protocol has been greatly streamlined. The process was once painstakingly slow, requiring two verified miracles for beatification and two more for canonization. When St. Therese of Lisieux was canonized in 1925 - 28 years after her death - it set a modern speed record. In comparison, Queen Isabella - the one who bankrolled Christopher Columbus - is still waiting, 499 years after her death. The snail's pace was intended to dampen any faddish enthusiasms. The church would not be buffaloed. Mr. Hitchens likes to quote the 19th-century British historian, Thomas Babington Macaulay, who observed that one of the great achievements of the church was its "containment" of fanaticism. But in a 1983 "apostolic constitution," John Paul II fast-tracked the canonization process. The four-miracle requirement was cut to two. The devil's advocate position - created in 1587 - was abolished. Since then, John Paul has become the most prolific saint-maker in history, having canonized 476 people and beatified more than 1,300. Together, all of his 20th-century predecessors canonized 98. Well before her death in 1997, Mother Teresa was hailed as a "living saint" and "the saint of the gutters." And now the Macedonian nun has been beatified faster than anyone in modern history: It took only five years, three months. That's partly because Archbishop Henry D'Souza of Calcutta petitioned for a waiver of the five-year "cooling off" period that the church had imposed before a person could be considered for beatification. The pope agreed. As Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the Vatican's doctrinal overseer, said after Mother Teresa's death, "I am not privy to the innermost thoughts of the Holy Father, but I think he wants it [her canonization] speeded up." The resulting inquiry wasn't the most august process, Mr. Hitchens said. He likened it to "a seminar hearing in a rundown college." He met with a three-member tribunal in a paneled room at Catholic University - one of 14 such tribunals worldwide in Mother Teresa's case. The journalist began by thanking the committee for the chance to present his objections. "'As you know,'" he recalled saying, "'I am not a believer, not a member of the faith, and so whom you make a saint is none of my concern. It's very decent of you to ask me into your internal affairs. But to the extent that the word sainthood or beatification has a secular meaning regarding an exemplary life, an exemplary person, I would like to enter a dissent.'" They accepted a copy of his Mother Teresa book as evidence, and then proceeded through 263 questions - "a standard questionnaire from Rome that everyone has to fill in," Mr. Hitchens said. "There is no deviation. I had to simply check 'yes' or 'no' or 'no comment.'" The famously combative journalist was disappointed once again. There was no debate, no probing questions, "no dialectical opposition," he said. Instead, when the questionnaire was done, he was politely told the record of his testimony would be processed quickly. Father Kolodiejchuk submitted all of the testimony to the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints (the Vatican office that handles canonization). The cardinals and bishops voted. The pope concurred. Mother Teresa can now officially be called "Blessed." Before she can be called "Saint," another verified miracle is needed. Not surprisingly, Mr. Hitchens dismisses the validity of the first, the disappearance of an abdominal cyst from a Hindu mother. But given the enormous popularity of Mother Teresa and given the reverence in which she's held both in the church and out, the only question would seem to be whether John Paul II will live to see her canonized. As for the dissenting Mr. Hitchens, he believes "I was restrained by the rules from making my best case." But he consoles himself with this thought: "I did represent the devil pro bono."
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Alice: But I don't want to go among mad people. The Cat: Oh, you can't help that. We're all mad here. I'm mad. You're mad. Alice: How do you know I'm mad? The Cat: You must be. Or you wouldn't have come here.
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