Excerpts from the transcript of Mother Teresa's Acceptance
Speech for the Nobel Peace Prize, held on 10 December 1979 in the Aula of the
University of Oslo, Norway.[1]
*****
…,
I personally am most unworthy, and I having avowed poverty to be able to
understand the poor, I choose the poverty of our people. But I am grateful and
I am very happy to receive it in the name of the hungry, of the naked, of the
homeless, of the crippled, of the blind, of the leprous, of all those people
who feel unwanted, unloved, uncared, thrown away of the society, people who
have become a burden to the society, and are ashamed by everybody.
In
their name I accept the award. And I am sure this award is going to bring an
understanding love between the rich and the poor. And this is what Jesus has
insisted so much, that is why Jesus came to earth, to proclaim the good news to
the poor. And through this award and through all of us gathered here
together, we are wanting to proclaim the good news to the poor that God loves
them, that we love them, that they are somebody to us, that they too have been
created by the same loving hand of God, to love and to be loved. Our poor
people are great people, are very lovable people, they don't need our pity and
sympathy, they need our understanding love. They need our respect; they need
that we treat them with dignity.
*****
One evening a gentleman came to our house and said, there is
a Hindu family and the eight children have not eaten for a long time. Do
something for them. And I took rice and I went immediately, and there was this
mother, those little one's faces, shining eyes from sheer hunger. She took the
rice from my hand, she divided into two and she went out. When she came back, I
asked her, where did you go? What did you do? And one answer she gave me: They
are hungry also. She knew that the next-door neighbor, a Muslim family, was
hungry.
What
surprised me most, not that she gave the rice, but what surprised me most, that
in her suffering, in her hunger, she knew that somebody else was hungry, and
she had the courage to share, share the love. And this is what I mean, I want
you to love the poor, and never turn your back to the poor, for in turning your
back to the poor, you are turning it to Christ.
*****
And we will love naturally, we will try to do something.
First in our own home, next door neighbor in the country we live, in the whole
world. And let us all join in that one prayer, God give us courage to protect
the unborn child, for the child is the greatest gift of God to a family, to a
nation and to the whole world. God bless you!
[1] The complete lecture is
at http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1979/teresa-acceptance_en.html
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