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Empire State Building not lit for Mother

The Empire State Building was lit in red, white and blue on Thursday night for women's suffrage as more than 100 people protested a refusal by the iconic skyscraper's owner to mark Mother Teresa's 100th birthday.

Updated on: Aug 27, 2010 10:06 AM IST
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The Empire State Building was lit in red, white and blue on Thursday night for women's suffrage as more than 100 people protested a refusal by the iconic skyscraper's owner to mark Mother Teresa's 100th birthday.

HT Image
HT Image

Yet the colors that the Catholic League had requested in her honor appeared to be, viewed from blocks to the west, the most luminous against the darkened skyline: The building's 203-foot (60-meter) pinnacle blazed a brilliant blue, while the stories just below glowed a frosty white. It was underscored by red. The colors chosen were intended to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution, which gave women the right to vote. Nevertheless, demonstrators led by the Catholic League protested the building owner's decision to deny the organization's request to change the colors of its lights to blue and white in honor of the Nobel Peace Prize-winning nun.

The building's owner, Anthony Malkin, has cited a policy of not illuminating the edifice for religious figures for the denial. He didn't respond to a phone message requesting comment on Thursday. City resident James Cagney, 77, was with his wife at the demonstration. He called the decision to deny Mother Teresa the lighting honor a "crazy idea."

On Wednesday, the Empire State Building's owner lost a bid to keep a skyscraper from being built in the same neighborhood, changing the skyline.

New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan said Mother Teresa, who was born Aug. 26, 1910, may not have approved of the brouhaha over the lighting of the skyscraper.

Dolan, speaking at St. Patrick's Cathedral with members of Mother Teresa's order in the pews dressed in the blue-and-white saris she favored, said she "might be a little unhappy."

"She was humility personified," he said. "She didn't like a lot of attention."

Mother Teresa died Sept. 5, 1997, at age 87. In 2003, she was beatified by the Roman Catholic Church - a step toward possible sainthood.

In her honor, billboards in Times Square were expected to be illuminated. And Mayor Michael Bloomberg and other city officials announced an online exchange where residents can volunteer their time and skills or receive services from others.

The program, called timebanking, allows members to earn credits for each hour they spend giving their services. Those credits can then be redeemed for services.

 
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