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Mother Teresa and Albanian Christianity are intertwined - study

Mother Teresa's life and the history of Albania are intertwined, with the humanitarian icon epitomising her nation's cultural and spiritual DNA, the new study Mother Teresa: The Saint and Her Nation reveals.

Mother Teresa book cover

Cover of new book – ‘Mother Teresa: The Saint and Her Nation’ by Dr Gëzim Alpion

Mother Teresa’s life and the history of Albania - especially its people’s relationship with Roman Catholicism - are intertwined, with the humanitarian icon epitomising her nation’s cultural and spiritual DNA, the new study Mother Teresa: The Saint and Her Nation reveals.

Its author, Dr Gëzim Alpion, from the University of Birmingham, claims that personal tragedies and Albanian origins helped shape Mother Teresa into the most influential religious personality of our times.

This is the first study that places Mother Teresa in the context of her ethno-spiritual roots, looking at her vocation and mission as a reflection of the Albanian people’s tumultuous history over the last two millennia.

In this work, Dr Alpion explores what he perceives as the negative impact of the Ottoman Empire and organisations such as the Vatican, Serbian Orthodox Church, Greek Orthodox Church and Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople on the Balkans.

The monograph highlights the need for more objective studies that illustrate the detrimental role of religion in fabricating national identity, as well as justifying territorial annexation.

Dr Alpion commented: “An icon of Mother Teresa’s global influence does not come about by chance. We must understand her life and work in the light of her family, the Albanian nation’s spiritual tradition, and the impact of the Vatican and other influential powers on her people since the early Middle Ages.

“Her personal tragedies and Albanian roots contributed in turning Mother Teresa into the most influential religious and humanitarian icon of our times. Albanian Christianity is rooted in Illyrian antiquity and, together with the Catholic Church’s attitude towards Albanians and the Slavs of the South, was instrumental in shaping Mother Teresa’s life and ministry.”

Dr Alpion has long maintained that the death of Mother Teresa’s father, who was poisoned by Slavic nationalists in 1919 when she was nine, triggered ‘a dark night of the soul’. The study offers new evidence on the role that this bereavement and the loss of eight close relatives during the Spanish flu pandemic had in Mother Teresa’s religious calling and the charism of her Missionaries of Charity order she set up in 1950.

Her early traumatic experiences, combined with her lifelong spiritual darkness, her brother’s association with Benito Mussolini’s army and her concern about her mother and sister’s safety in communist Albania post-1945, the author claims, caused her to never speak about her private affairs.

Dr Alpion, from the University’s Department of Social Policy, Sociology and Criminology, says: "Mother Teresa’s devotion to the poor was unwavering and genuine to the end, but the ever-presence of death in her family during her childhood was a traumatic experience that had a life-long impact on her spirituality and relationship with family members, her nation and vulnerable people. While, she was never cured of her doubts in God, Mother Teresa always held sacred the dignity of every human being."

Mother Teresa, also known in the Roman Catholic Church as Saint Teresa of Calcutta, was an Albanian-Indian Roman Catholic nun and missionary, born in Skopje (now the capital of North Macedonia) in 1910, then part of the Kosovo Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire.

After living in Skopje for 18 years she moved to Ireland and then to India, where she lived for most of her life until she died in 1997.

  • For more information or interviews, please contact: Tony Moran, International Communications Manager on +44 (0) 121 415 8254 or +44 (0) 7827 832312. Contact the press office out of hours on +44 (0) 7789 921 165 or email Dr Gëzim Alpion  
  • The University of Birmingham is ranked among the world’s top 100 institutions, its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers and teachers and more than 6,500 international students from over 150 countries.
  • Dr Gëzim Alpion is an acclaimed academic, writer, playwright, journalist, and a media, political and culture analyst. Educated at Cairo University and the University of Durham, Alpion lectured at the Universities of Huddersfield, Sheffield Hallam, and Newman prior to joining the Department of Sociology at the University of Birmingham in 2002. He joined the Department of Political Science and International Studies in 2010 and the School of Social Policy in 2016.
  • Alpion is considered ‘the most authoritative English-language author’ on Mother Teresa and the ‘founder of Mother Teresa Studies’. In recent years, he has delivered over 50 keynote addresses, talks and lectures at international conferences and renowned universities in 15 countries.
  • The Department of Social Policy, Sociology and Criminology at the University of Birmingham is the leading multi-disciplinary academic team committed to providing world-class research and innovative degree programmes. The department delivers researched teaching with 66% of publications by their academic staff rated as world-leading or internationally excellent in the latest Research Excellence Framework. They are at the forefront of cutting-edge social science research that informs and influences public debate.
  • Mother Teresa: The Saint and Her Nation is published by Bloomsbury Academic worldwide on 31 July 2020 – more information can be found at eBook: www.bloomsbury.com/9789389165050/ or hardback: www.bloomsbury.com/9789389165043/