Missionaries of Charity Express Sorrow Over Scandal, Openness to Just Inquiry

The superior general said Tuesday the congregation is ‘deeply saddened and grieved’ by the alleged sale of several children by an employee of one of its homes for unwed mothers.

Sister Mary Prema Pierick, superior general of the Missionaries of Charity, speaks at the Vatican, Sept. 2, 2016.
Sister Mary Prema Pierick, superior general of the Missionaries of Charity, speaks at the Vatican, Sept. 2, 2016. (photo: Daniel Ibanez/CNA)

KOLKATA, India — The superior general of the Missionaries of Charity said Tuesday the congregation is “deeply saddened and grieved” by the alleged sale of several children by an employee of one of its homes for unwed mothers.

“Even while we place our full trust in the judicial process that is underway, we wish to express regret and sorrow for what happened and desire to express in unequivocal terms our condemnation of individual actions which have nothing to do with the Congregation of the Missionaries of Charity,” Sister Mary Prema Pierick said in a July 17 statement.

“We are fully cooperating with the investigations and are open to any free, fair and just inquiry.”

Earlier this month, two women affiliated with the Missionaries of Charity, one a religious sister and one an employee, were arrested over the alleged sale of a baby boy.

Anima Indwar, who had worked at the Nirmal Hriday home in Ranchi since 2012, and Sister Concelia (Konsalia), were arrested July 3 and 4. Sister Concelia had been sister in charge of the unwed mothers section at the home since June 2017.

Indwar was trusted with escorting the unwed mothers, their babies and their guardians to the hospital and to the Child Welfare Committee office when the religious sisters were engaged with other duties.

Several child-protection officers seized admission and attendance registers from Nirmal Hriday June 29, “without providing the receipt for such seizure to the home,” according to Sister Mary Prema.

The officers were interested particularly in the case of Karishma Toppo and her baby, who was born at the shelter May 1. Toppo agreed to hand over her child to the Child Welfare Committee, and Indwar escorted her to surrender her child to the welfare committee.

“Neither Nirmal Hriday nor the sisters had any way to ascertain whether the child was actually surrendered to CWC. This is so because CWC, as a matter of practice, did not give any acknowledgment to the home after obtaining custody of a child from an unwed mother,” Sister Mary Prema stated.

Indwar admitted July 3 that Toppo’s child had not been given to the CWC, and she was arrested.

The following day, Sisters Concelia and Marie Deanne, superior of Nirmal Hriday, were questioned by police, and Sister Concelia was arrested. The home’s 11 unwed mothers, another mother with her child and a guardian were all taken from Nirmal Hriday by the CWC.

On July 6, another Missionaries of Charity home in Ranchi, Shishu Bhawan, was raided by the police. Records there were seized without receipt, and 22 children living at the home were taken.

“It is distressing that CWC has meted out such treatment to a home which its officials themselves had described as having an ‘excellent environment for the care of children’ only about two weeks before,” Sister Mary Prema said in regard to Shishu Bhawan.

Police say that a couple complained to the CWC in Ranchi that a baby boy they received after payment had been taken back. They say the couple reportedly paid Indwar 120,000 Indian rupees ($1,760). They complained that Indwar took their money in exchange for a child and that she later took the child back from them for some “formalities,” without returning the money.

Indwar has admitted that she sold children.

Sister Concelia described her experience in a video.

“I came to know that a baby, delivered in May, was missing when the Child Welfare Committee came to check,” she said in a video. “We found out that the baby had been sold off by a staffer.”

Sister Concelia has recounted her conversation with Indwar. “When I initially asked the staffer about the baby, she did not want to tell me anything. It was only when I kept pressing for details that they told me the baby had been sold,” she said.

A small portion of the money had been given to the guard, while nine times that amount was given to “a sister.”

Sister Concelia said that Indwar told her she did not take any money.

The nun said she informed authorities about the matter and said the baby should be brought back.

A police source said that Indwar provided to police a handwritten note from Sister Concelia asking Indwar to take the blame on herself, Matters India reports.

Sister Concelia’s defenders, including the bishops of India, are asking whether she was an accomplice or the victim of a coerced confession.

“Nobody was allowed to meet Sister Concelia in custody,” Bishop Theodore Mascarenhas, auxiliary Bishop of Ranchi, said. “Her advocate could meet her on Wednesday, eight days after her arrest, only after we approached the court,” he said July 12, according to the Hindustan Times. “During the 10-minute interaction that the advocate could have with her, she said she was forced by the police to give her statement.”

Bishop Mascarenhas had objected that the nun was being treated as a criminal. He said she is diabetic with varicose veins and wasn’t aware of her statement.

He also condemned the sale. “It shouldn’t have happened. But accusing the entire congregation of Mother Teresa is wrong.”

India’s Ministry of Women and Child Development has instructed states to inspect all child care homes run by the Missionaries of Charity.

A representative for the Missionaries of Charity has said the order stopped dealing with child adoption in India in 2015 and did not take money for adoptions when it did assist in them. The order is conducting their own investigation about the case.  

Members of opposition parties have accused India’s ruling party, the Hindu-nationalist group the Bharatiya Janata Party, of harassing and persecuting the missionaries on the basis of unbelievable allegations.

The Jharkhand police have also called for a Central Bureau of Investigation probe into foreign funds received by Missionaries of Charity institutions. R.K. Mallick, the senior police officer, told NDTV that the recommendation was motivated by irregularities investigators detected.

The Albanian-born Mother Teresa founded the Missionaries of Charity in Kolkata in 1950. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 and canonized in 2016. There are now 5,167 Missionaries of Charity sisters, both active and contemplative, around the world. The order has 244 houses in India.

In addition to the vows of chastity, poverty and obedience, members of the Missionaries of Charity take a fourth vow, pledging “wholehearted free service to the poorest of the poor.”

Sister Mary Prema said the order “vows to continue their wholehearted and free service to the poorest of the poor, by serving the needy and vulnerable even in the middle of the unprecedented and unfounded criticism that it faces today. We have full faith in the courts of law and the investigating authorities and are confident that justice shall prevail.”

“We pray for all those who have been hurt by the recent developments, and we ask God to bless all those who are standing by us in these painful and difficult moments; and we lift up to God in prayer all people of goodwill,” she added.

“May our Mother, St. Teresa of Calcutta, intercede for us before our Almighty Father.”