Kolkata:
When lakhs of people will gather in Vatican City this September to watch the
historic ceremony of granting sainthood to Mother Teresa, a group of Kolkatans
will hold photo exhibitions in Rome inviting visitors to the city where the
late nun worked.
Using
the power of images, music and verbal discussions, internationally acclaimed
photographer Kounteya Sinha and his team of volunteers will hold exhibits at 11
places in Rome and the Vatican City, as part of their two week-long civilian
movement called ‘The Sainthood Project’. “The Mother used to work in slums of
Kolkata. If she could, then why can't we walk around potholes and slum areas
where there is gutter? We want people from all over the world to come and see
Kolkata where the Mother worked all her life,” said Sinha.
The
Kolkata-born ace lensman, who has lived in London for many years, said hardly
one per cent of those who will be coming to see the canonisation ceremony know
about Kolkata where the Roman Catholic nun spent 45 years serving the poor and
sick on the streets.
He
plans to present a collection of 50 shots of the city by hanging it using clips
on a rope and display it in roadsides where volunteers will hold the two ends
of the rope. “The idea is also to break all stereotypes about the city. So we
are not keeping the Victoria Memorial, Howrah Bridge or the British
architectural beauty of the city,” he said.
They
are promoting small localities like Kumartoli, where potters make clay idols of
Goddesses Durga and Kali, the flower market, Sonagachi (Asia’s largest
red-light area), the numerous lanes and and slums of the city in which Mother
Teresa and her Missionaries of Charity worked.
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