A house built by Mother Teresa torn down in Moscow
(Sept.21, 2011) In Russia, as the city of Moscow prepares to unveil a bronze statue
of Mother Teresa of Kolkata next Saturday, the city government tore down a hospice
run by the Missionaries of Charity, the religious order founded by the Blessed of
Kolkata, for “lack of permits”. All attempts by the Russian Orthodox Church to find
a compromise, including an intervention by Patriarch Kirill, to stop the demolition
on 16 September proved fruitless. The statue of Mother Teresa, who was beatified by
Pope John Paul II in 2003, will stand next to the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.
Located in the eastern part of the Russian capital, the two-building hospice drew
the attention of Moscow municipal authorities three years ago, when they tried to
get a court order to force the Missionaries to tear down one of the two buildings.
For the sisters, “the destruction of a place built with donations from around the
world is a sign of blindness to human pain and a show of contempt for those who help
the poor.” For their part, Moscow municipal authorities chose instead to make no comment.
The Moscow hospice was founded in 1990 and is run by missionaries from around
the world. It helps abandoned children, terminally ill patients, the homeless and
the disabled. It also helps recovering alcoholics.