Look it up: Mother Teresa on abortion

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The woman known to the world as Mother Teresa originally came to India to teach the children of the privileged. She eventually heard the call of the Lord to leave the security of the convent to serve the least of all, people thrown away by society, left to die in the streets.

Pope Francis has approved a miracle attributed to the intercession of Blessed Teresa of Kolkata, paving the way for her canonization in 2016. This Dec. 12, 1979, photo shows Mother Teresa in Oslo, Norway, after receiving the Nobel Peace Price. (CNS/EPA)
Pope Francis has approved a miracle attributed to the intercession of Blessed Teresa of Kolkata, paving the way for her canonization in 2016. This Dec. 12, 1979, photo shows Mother Teresa in Oslo, Norway, after receiving the Nobel Peace Price. (CNS/EPA)

But her humble and quiet work among these poorest of the poor could not remain hidden for long. Eventually she was acclaimed by the elite of the world, who invited her to address them at various VIP events.

So in the last decade of her life, Mother Teresa spoke at international conferences, congressional prayer breakfasts and the United Nations. She even traveled to Oslo, Norway, to accept the Nobel Peace Prize.

In her addresses to the powerful of the earth, there were several recurring themes. She often spoke about obstacles to peace and solutions to poverty. Repeatedly, however, she identified the evil that she saw to be the epitome of violence and poverty in the world — abortion.

For Mother Teresa, the second greatest poverty in the world is the experience of being rejected and cast off by society. The greatest poverty is the spiritual emptiness that causes people to discard other human beings as useless objects.

Mother Teresa also identified abortion as the greatest threat to peace in the world. For abortion is not simply a matter of the abandonment and indifference suffered by the poor dying in the streets of Kolkata. It is an act of intentional violence, of direct killing as a means to an end.

In her acceptance speech of the Nobel Peace Prize, she told her distinguished audience: “Millions are dying deliberately by the will of the mother. And this is what is the greatest destroyer of peace today. Because if a mother can kill her own child — what is left but for me to kill you and you kill me?”

When she spoke before U.S. government officials, many of whom had campaigned in favor of abortion, she said: “By abortion, the mother does not learn to love, but kills even her own child to solve her problems. … Any country that accepts abortion is not teaching its people to love, but to use any violence to get what they want. This is why the greatest destroyer of love and peace is abortion.”

In her strong, unambiguous denunciation of abortion, Mother Teresa is a model of prophetic courage. But to her condemnation she added other words that show us what an integrated, consistent pro-life position truly looks like.

At the 1994 International Conference on Population in Cairo, she said, “If there is a child that you don’t want or can’t feed or educate, give that child to me. I will not refuse any child. I will give a home or find loving parents for him or for her.” Authentic pro-life witness must not simply condemn the crime, but welcome the child.

By Marcellino D’Ambrosio

D’Ambrosio is co-founder of Crossroads Productions, an apostolate of Catholic renewal and evangelization.