Many people just seem to have got into the habit of being skeptical and scornful. Compulsive disorder almost.
St.Teresa has done remarkable things that none of us here would even thing of doing. She is considered a saint because she showed love and care to people (lepers) who no one (even many doctors) would even touch. She literally picked them up from the streets and gave them some dignity and care.
You people are going on and no about injections and needles. She gave them whatever care was available locally at that time. Five star treatment was never the option. Even today in India and many other poorer countries, over crowded hospitals in rural areas and even urban areas probably run with the same kind of very basic care.
Wrong on so many counts.
She wasn't the only one providing care - despite the western 'myth' there were (and still are) many, many similar organisations working in Calcutta - indeed in one of the most well research and damning critiques of her work (by a person from Calcutta, so someone who actually knows what was going on on the ground) her organisation wasn't even in the top 20 in the city in terms of the number of poor people it helped. So hers was a astonishingly wealthy organisation doing very little while many other organisations with a fraction of her funding were doing far more.
And no I'm not banging on and on about needles - we are talking about basic fundamental care here. She could afford to provide basic care (clean needles, proper pain relief, basic diagnostic tests, antibiotics) - but she chose not to. The result that people with easily treatable diseases were assumed to be dying and were allowed to die. Others arriving would become infected with life threatening disease due to lack of basic medical hygiene. Those dying suffered unnecessary painful deaths (which if anyone has seen someone die in this manner is where dignity goes out of the window) because she withheld the necessary analgesics needed to manage their pain. She had tens of millions in funding - plenty to be able to provide such basic (and extremely cheap) items - she made the choice not to offer this basic care to the people she took in.
At best her choice on this is gross neglect, at worse massively abusive. Bad luck for anyone on the streets who encountered her organisation rather than one of the many others who provide much more appropriate basic and medical care to the most needy.