Posted 2015-January-05, 17:15
What do you mean by 'good person'?
My understanding, mostly gleaned from a documentary I watched on television shortly after her death, was that she was seriously misguided.
The documentary showed some of the facilities in which her people 'cared' for the homeless and the sick. It featured interviews with former volunteers, admittedly disillusioned ones. It also featured interviews with admirers, so it didn't come across as a hatchet job.
What it conveyed was that she had no interest in providing medical care. A person died or didn't die and that was god's choice. Her mission wasn't to relieve suffering in this world but, rather, to help the poor, dying people recognize jesus and hence be saved in the next world. She ministered to the sick, rather than cared for them.
She was a fanatic. That served her well, in terms of enabling her to persist in her mission in the early years, when she had little, if any, backing from the Catholic establishment, and it played a major role in her later ability to generate funding.
However, her fanaticism caused her to allow thousands to die deaths that could have easily been postponed through the provision of basic medical care.
The saddest part of the documentary, as I recall it, was towards the end when they suggested that in the last years of her life, she began to have doubts about her mission.
I don't think there was ever any question that she lived the good life while extolling the virtues of poverty, unlike many American evangelical preachers, or many in the Catholic hierarchy, but the fact that she was a true believer doesn't make her a 'good person'. Indeed, given what she believed, and what I don't believe, to me she was a monster. A human monster, but one who allowed her absolute faith in her particular brand of religion to control not only her life (which was her choice and I would never argue against it) but also to permit countless people to die when she had it in her power to save them.
That is my own take, since I strongly believe that religious fanaticism, of all faiths, is a pernicious influence in human affairs. I recognize that this is far from a mainstream view in NA, and in many other parts of the world, and thus I recognize that many might well see the Teresa's of the world as 'more good than bad'.
Had she applied her zeal to an issue such as women's right to education, or eliminating the worst aspects of the caste system, or fighting racism, even if in the name of a religion I reject, she would be one of those I most admire in life. By choosing to 'save' imaginary souls for a fictitious afterlife rather than making sick people healthier, she helped to perpetuate an inequitable social system and caused suffering rather than alleviating it, and that makes her a misguided bad person with some admirable qualities.
If you believe that jesus was the son of god, and died for our sins, and that heaven awaits those who die having accepted him into their lives, then Teresa will quite properly seem to you to have been one of the finest humans ever to live. I can't prove you wrong and we've been down that path too many times in the WC for me to even suggest opening that can of worms. I mention it only because how one sees the role of Xianity must colour and maybe dominate how one sees Teresa.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari