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prabhjit purewal
1. Dr. Prabhjit Purewal-Blue skies smile on
Mother Teresa
Rain was expected.
When Prabhjit Purewal, a Stockton
physician, touched down in Rome on Saturday, the plane skidded several times
while braking on the slick runway.
The next morning, rushing to join
the gathering throng to celebrate Mother Teresaâs beatification, Purewal forgot
his raincoat.
He didnât need it.
The sky cleared, the storm disappeared
and a tapestry of the smiling face of the tiny Albanian nun was drenched in
sunlight.
A minor miracle, Purewal joked,
but appreciated by the estimated 300,000 assembled in St. Peterâs Square awaiting
Pope John Paul IIâs pronouncement.
Purewal was invited to attend the
ceremony in acknowledgment of the three years â 1980 to 1983 â that he spent
working side-by-side with Mother Teresa in a leper colony in northern India.
He was but 21 at the time, and she was already a formidable force at getting
her way about getting things done.
His intent was to save lives, hers
to save souls, and sometimes they clashed. Still, Mother Teresa provided for
the young, Delhi-born doctor all the lessons he would need in compassion for
a lifetime.
In 2000, he founded the St. Teresa
Comprehensive Cancer Center in Stockton.
As he mingled with hotel guests
and people in the streets, Purewal discovered, however, he was one of thousands
touched in just the same way.
âI guess because I knew her, I was
feeling proprietary,â Purewal said by telephone after Mondayâs ceremonies concluded.
âEverybody seemed to know her well. The gentleman next to me was an German industrialist.
He had this note from her. Almost everybody there may have had a story to tell.â
There were people there from all
over the world, from Albania and Kosovo trying to claim her. Everybody wants
to claim her as their own, he added.
âShe truly did belong to the whole
world.â
2. Mother Teresa believed in taking
care of people one person at a time, he said, though she and her Missionaries
of Charity often sought to relieve the misery of whole villages at a time.
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The sisters currently working in
her order were evident by their indigo-trimmed, white saris. They brought with
them, from many of the orderâs 20 locations throughout the world, people who
were sick. Others, hoping for a miracle, came on their own.
Purewal spoke with a Venezuelan
man in his 50s who had a neurological affliction. The sick man said he prayed
to Mother Teresa and hoped to benefit from a papal blessing.
Though Purewal was given a seat
on the dais, he requested to be moved to the front to take photographs. In so
doing, he was impressed by the view of the pope flanked by Mother Teresaâs wrinkled
face and Christ on the cross.
This exemplified her life. She truly
lived for Christ, he said.
During the beatification ceremony,
the popeâs frail health prevented him from completing his own homily. On Monday,
his absence was noted during the thanksgiving Mass for Mother Teresa, which
was officiated by one of the cardinals, His Eminence Jose Saraiva Martins.
Purewal will conclude his Rome trip
visiting with sisters who were with him in India, Sister Dorothy from Bengale
and Sister Suzatta from Kerala. Sightseeing will be done on his own.
âThey are a very strict order. They
do not eat outside of their compound. They sleep on the ground,â Purewal said.
Their asceticism aside, Mother Teresa
inspires humor.
âI donât think sheâd spend too much
time in heaven. Sheâd be bored,â Purewal said. âSheâs probably in hell fixing
things up. Thatâs where sheâd probably find she could do more work.â