Saint Teresa's famous blue-rimmed white cotton sari trademarked | News
The white, blue-rimmed cotton sari made famous by Saint Teresa of Kolkata has been trademarked in a case the nunâs former lawyer has claimed as a first for a religious uniform anywhere in the world.
The design of the sari, which Teresa is said to have purchased from a Kolkata market the evening she was granted permission to start working in the cityâs slums, is now the exclusive intellectual property of the Missionaries of Charity, the order the nun founded nearly 70 years ago.
A lawyer for the order, Biswajit Sarkar, said he had applied for the trademark in 2013 to combat the âmisuseâ of the saintâs reputation, often for commercial gain. The trademark was formally granted in early 2016 but only recently publicised.
He said he would now take âsevereâ legal action against unauthorised use of the design, even by charitable enterprises that the orderâs nuns had been willing to tolerate.
âThere are many organisations starting schools naming themselves after Mother Teresa, and wearing the uniform, where the Missionaries of Charity have no connection,â he said.
Teachers at some schools named after Teresa had been writing to the Missionaries of Charity complaining about late salary payments, unaware their schools were separate entities, he said.
A cooperative bank had also been established in the nunâs name, he said, and in another instance, religious books were being published with the blue-striped trimming, giving the impression they were endorsed by the Kolkata-based order.
Sarkar, who has also had the name Mother Teresa trademarked, said the âsoft-heartedâ nuns had initially objected to also copyrighting the uniform. âThey donât like taking court cases,â he said. âThey say, âOne day the people will understand they are doing the wrong thing.â
âBut we cannot allow that. Now if anybody is misrepresenting the Missionaries of Charity we can take severe legal action.â
He said no exceptions would be made for use of the pattern by other religious orders, or by not-for-profit enterprises.
âEven the nuns were asking me, if the people are not using it for commercial gains, should we stop them?â he said.
âBut whether it is for commercial gain or not is not the issue. We are thinking about our identity. If the blue pattern, which is unique in the world, is diluted or used by the public, then one fine morning the organisation will lose their identity.â
Saint Teresa was born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu to an Albanian family in 1910, and joined a Kolkata-based convent at age 21. Horrified by the poverty in Kolkata, she sought permission to leave the institution and work among the cityâs poor.
In 1950, she established the Missionaries of Charity, which now runs 758 homes, hospices and shelters in 139 countries around the world. She died in 1997 and was canonised by Pope Francis in September last year.
Teresaâs emphasis on helping the âpoorest of the poorâ earned her global admiration and a slew of awards including the Nobel peace prize in 1979.
But the nunâs work has also drawn sharp criticism. Aroup Chatterjee, a doctor who grew up in Kolkata, wrote in a 2003 book that Teresa exaggerated the number of people her order had assisted, and treated the sick and dying in sub-standard medical facilities, despite having the money for upgrades.
A 2013 report in a religious studies journal concluded the Vatican had consistently ignored the nunâs ârather dubious way of caring for the sick, her questionable political contacts, her suspicious management of the enormous sums of money she received, and her overly dogmatic views regarding ⦠abortion, contraception and divorceâ.
Sarkar, who works pro bono for the nuns, said his next goal was to copyright Teresaâs name and the distinctive uniform of her order in other countries.
He will also seek to remove childrenâs versions of her sari that are advertised on Amazonâs India store and the websites of other retailers. âInstantly weâll work on that, we will write to them,â he said.
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