Manitoba

Winnipeg-born priest makes the case for Mother Teresa's sainthood

For the past 17 years, Father Brian Kolodiejchuk, who grew up in Winnipeg, has been gathering evidence and data for the Roman Catholic Church to canonize Mother Teresa as a saint.

Father Brian Kolodiejchuk has been the main proponent of Mother Teresa's case for sainthood

Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk was tasked with gathering information verifying that Mother Teresa had interceded in two cases that resulted in miracles. Both took place after her death. (The Mother Teresa Centre)

A North End Winnipeg man, who grew up in humble beginnings, has friends in high places. 

Father Brian Kolodiejchuk, a member of the Missionaries of Charity Fathers, has spent the past 17 years gathering evidence and data to make the case for Mother Teresa to be declared a saint by the Roman Catholic Church.

On Sept. 4, the humble nun who worked with the sick and poor in Calcutta and founded religious orders of men and women, will be formally canonized by Pope Francis in Rome. Kolodiejchuk will be there in St. Peter's Square.

"On a human level, it's a sense of mission accomplished, working all these years for the cause of her being canonized a saint," the 60-year-old priest said. 

From Winnipeg to Rome

Although the Winnipeg priest will be in Rome for the ceremony, watched around the world, his faith was rooted in Manitoba. 

Kolodiejchuk grew up on Burrows Avenue with his sister and parents. In the late 1970s, Kolodiejchuk studied at St. Vladimir's College in Roblin, Man. He furthered his education at the University of Winnipeg and St. Paul's College at the University of Manitoba.

Kolodiejchuk met Mother Teresa for the first time after his sister joined the Missionaries of Charity Sisters in 1976. In his early twenties, he travelled to Rome with his parents to see his sister. During a mass, Mother Teresa pinned a cross over the heart of one of the priests. 

"After the mass, when we were saying goodbye, she said, 'I want to pin a cross on you.' I was so shocked I didn't say anything. I just walked out the door. Then we had to leave to go back home to Winnipeg," Kolodiejchuk said.

Years later, Kolodiejchuk was ordained a priest. He travels between the Missionaries of Charity Fathers houses in Rome and Tijuana, Mexico.

Pope John Paul II greets Mother Teresa at the Vatican in Rome in June, 1997. Mother Teresa died in September of that year. She will be made a saint on Sept. 4. (L'Osservatore Romano/AP)

The Winnipeg-born priest has since been in the presence of Mother Teresa dozens of times. 

"She was very maternal, very motherly, very ordinary," Kolodiejchuk said. 

The priest talked about meeting Mother Teresa in New York after a long flight. When they got back to the convent, the sisters would serve tea and coffee with biscuits. 

"Rather than being waited on, Mother Teresa would get up — after coming from Rome, back from a trip with a six hour difference — and she herself would come into the parlor with a tray with tea and coffee and cookies," Kolodiejchuk recalled.

It was a simple moment, but it captured who Mother Teresa was, Kolodiejchuk said.

"How many people would give anything to see her, meet her just once, and here she was doing the most ordinary, motherly thing," he said, adding she was like a mother to everyone. "Very simple. Very ordinary. She was a mother to me."

Soon after Mother Teresa died in 1997, Kolodiejchuk was named the postulator — the main promoter of her cause for sainthood, uncovering and presenting evidence of two miracles after her death. 

Miracles documented

Kolodiejchuk's job was to collect the evidence of two confirmed miracles. 

"I gathered 35,000 pages in 81 volumes — 113 witnesses who answered a series of 263 questions. Seventeen volumes ended up being the witness material," he said.

The first miracle involved an Indian woman in Calcutta who had a massive tumour in her abdomen that Kolodiejchuk said was roughly the size of a woman six months pregnant. Doctors told the woman nothing could be done for her.

On Sept. 5, 1998, exactly a year after Mother Teresa's death, a locket containing her picture was placed on the woman's stomach and within days the woman was healed.

The second miracle was in 2008 when a Brazilian man had hydrocephaly, a bacteria infection on the brain with abscesses. He was in excruciating pain and went into a coma. The man was near death and in an operating room but before the doctor began operating the man woke up and was healed, Kolodiejchuk said. 

Pope Francis acknowledged the second miracle last year, clearing the way for Mother Teresa's canonization as a saint.

Mother Teresa, seen in her hospital around the time she was awarded the Templeton Prize for Progress. (Photo by Mark Edwards/Keystone Features/Getty Images) (Mark Edwards/The Templeton Foundation/Getty Images )
Mother Teresa's canonization is not just important for the Catholic Church, but for the whole world, Kolodiejchuk said.

He said when Mother Teresa is declared a saint, the Pope will say that the nun is in heaven. 

"She intercedes for us, that she didn't do the miracles, God did the miracles at her request because of her prayer and intercession," Kolodiejchuk said. "And lastly, she is an example to all us. In secular terms, she is a Christian hero."

The humble nun also has popularity outside of the church and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Kolodiejchuk said many people see her as synonymous with goodness and kindness.

'A special love for Canada and for Winnipeg'

Although the priest travels the world, Kolodiejchuk said he loves Winnipeg and misses his mother and friends. 

"I have a special love for Canada and for Winnipeg. Sometimes I feel more Canadian outside of Canada than when I was living there," he said. 

"I love Winnipeg, that's where my family and friends are. And I love watching a hockey game. I love going back to the Peg when I have the chance."

Kolodiejchuk was in Winnipeg in 2013 to visit his mother and plans to come back in a couple years. 

He said he knows his mother, and millions of Catholics around the world, will be watching the canonization ceremony.

"I have such a feeling of gratitude that I was able to see this through to the end, that it is happening. It has been an honour to be so directly involved."