DAILY NEWS

The Roman Catholic Church drove a saint out of west Belfast, a nun alleges

In a controversial new television documentary the Irish nun claims to have solved the mystery of why Mother Teresa, who is being made a saint by the Vatican, pulled her order of nuns out of Ballymurphy in the 1970s.

The Belfast Telegraph reports today that The Sisters of Charity order, founded by Mother Teresa, set up home in Springhill Avenue in Belfast at the height of the Troubles in October 1971.

Just 18 months later the four nuns suddenly departed, to the surprise of residents. There were whispers the order was not welcomed and were forced out by a priest and bishop.

Sister Eileen Sweeney, who visited the nuns’ Belfast home the day after they left, said she found a torn-up letter written by Mother Teresa which supports the view the nuns were pushed out.

The letter was written to the local bishop, Dr William Philbin, in which she began: “Bishop I feel sorry for you. What you said was most unkind…”

Mother Teresa then agreed to cover up the dispute with the Church for its sake and to prevent bad feeling in the community.

Sister Sweeney, who is now in her 80s and lives in Dublin, said she pieced the letter together to keep as a memento of Mother Teresa but no longer has it.

The programme suggests the parish priest, Canon Padraig Murphy, resented missionaries being sent to Belfast, believing that they should come from the city.

The documentary is screened tonight, Monday, April 11 at 10.35pm on BBC1.