Mother Teresa: A Biography

(Nandana) #1

and stalls appeared in the area where once only crime and violence had
flourished.
But no sooner had the clinic opened than the municipal leaders feared
an influx of lepers would come to Titlagarh. They begged Mother Teresa
to consider opening yet another facility for lepers. With that in mind,
Mother Teresa turned to her next project: Shantinagar.


SHANTINAGAR

In 1961, Mother Teresa received a gift from the Indian government: 34
acres of land located about 200 miles from Calcutta. She would pay the
government an annual fee of one rupee a year for the land. The land was
uncultivated, almost a jungle in appearance. With funds raised by Ger-
man children singing at a charity concert, Mother Teresa began construc-
tion of Shantinagar—The Place of Peace for Lepers.
There was not enough money to complete the project. Hoping for a
miracle, the Missionaries of Charity prayed for guidance. Their prayers
were answered in 1965 in the form of a white 1964 Lincoln Continental
automobile. The car was originally a present from American Catholics to
Pope Paul VI. The pope had the car specially flown in for his state visit to
India in 1964. While there, he visited Mother Teresa and the home at
Nirmal Hriday and was so touched by the work of the Missionaries of
Charity that he gave the car to Mother Teresa before he left. Having no
practical use for the car, Mother Teresa raffled it off, raising a much larger
sum of money than she would have by simple selling the automobile. In
the end, the raffle netted the order of approximately 460,000 rupees or
$100,000. With the funds raised by the raffle, Mother Teresa could pay for
the main hospital block at Shantinagar.
In 1968, Mother Teresa sent Sister Francis Xavier along with several
other sisters to Shantinagar to oversee the construction and maintenance
of the grounds. Within the next two years, a number of key buildings went
up including a rehabilitation center and cottage for lepers built by the pa-
tients themselves. In addition, flowering trees and shrubs, fruit trees, and
vegetable gardens were planted on the grounds. The nearby pond was
stocked with fish, all with an eye to promoting self-sufficiency among the
residents.
In time, the home for lepers offered treatment and a chance at a nor-
mal life for almost 400 lepers and their families. New arrivals were taught
to make bricks in order to construct new homes for future patients. The
residents tended their own cattle, grew their own rice and wheat, and
tilled their own gardens. Others ran a grocer’s shop. Some residents made


88 MOTHER TERESA

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