Notice: You have been identified as a bot, so no internal UID will be assigned to you. If you are a real person messing with your useragent, you should change it back to something normal.
Extremely strict Indian laws meant that strong pain medicine was very limited in when it was allowed to be given, even for people dying painful deaths. Additionally, there was limited access to doctors. Primarily her facility was designed to try to help people get better and at the very least give them a place where they could die with a measure of dignity. I think they tried their best with what they had in the face of incredible poverty and suffering.
Suffering is holy, but people in the clinics still received the pain medicine that they were allowed to administer. Mother Teresa didn't make the law forbidding morphine.
Kook !!rcSrAtaAC double-posted this 2 years ago, 10 minutes later, 6 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,292,373
Mother Theresa visited the ghettos of DC and was asked what she wanted to accomplish:
Theresa: The joy of loving and being loved
Reporter: That takes a lot of money, doesn't it?
Theresa: it takes a lot of sacrifice
Reporter: Do you teach the poor to endure their lot?
Theresa: I think it is very beautiful for the poor to accept their lot. To share it with the passion of Christ. I think the world is much helped by the suffering of poor people