Mother Teresa's nuns pray for JFK Jr.

Mother Teresa’s nuns pray for
JFK Jr.

                          AP News Service
                             

                          CALCUTTA, India (AP) _ Mother
                          Teresa's order of nuns held  special
                          prayers Tuesday for John F. Kennedy Jr.,
                          as friends  recalled his three-month
                          sojourn in India as a shaggy-haired
                           college student.  

             Kennedy visited the Missionaries of Charity at its Calcutta
              headquarters during a trip to India in 1983 to research a
             thesis on  Indian democracy for his undergraduate studies.  

             ``We are praying for him. We are praying to the Lord so
             that he  may grant peace and comfort to the members of
             the bereaved  family,'' said Sister Nirmala, who became
             head of the order shortly  before Mother Teresa's death in
             1997.  

             The Times of India said Kennedy spent much of his visit to
             the  country in a low-grade New Delhi hotel in the
             Paharganj district,  which specializes in cheap
             accommodation and clothing stores for  backpackers.  

             ``He seemed to revel in being rebellious. Which explains his
              insistence on wearing the same jeans for weeks, not
             shaving and  keeping his hair long,'' said Vishu Bandhu
             Gupta, the Indian  bureaucrat who looked after him,
             according to the Times.  

             Kennedy avoided the staff of the U.S. Embassy until his
             mother,  Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, joined him. She
             reportedly was  horrified when she saw her son, took him
             to a luxury hotel, and  persuaded him to wear a suit, the
             Times said.

JFK Junior's 60 quiet days in Paharganj

          By Vinay Tewari

          NEW DELHI: John F Kennedy Jr, who disappeared into the deep
          blues in his light plane off Martha's Vineyard in the US over the
          weekend, had spent 60 quiet days in anonymity in the dingy bylanes
          of Delhi's Paharganj in 1982, holed up in a hotel without a phone -
          unshaven, unwashed and clad in a pair of battered jeans.

          But what brought the son of America's most loved President here?
          What made him scour the little lanes and bylanes around Lodhi
          Colony, Parliament Street and Connaught Place with just Rs 150 in
          his pocket to see through a day?

          ``He was required to submit a project paper on the functioning of
          Indian democracy as part of his undergraduate studies at Brown
          University. He wanted complete anonymity... as he realised he
          could experience real Indian vibrancy only by melting in the
          crowd,'' says bureaucrat Vishv Bandhu Gupta, who opened up the
          world of India for him along with Tony Jesudasan, then working for
          the US embassy here.

          But that was just his stated objective. JFK Jr had other ideas.
          Keen to shake off the regimented lifestyle of a ``royal'', always
          under the glare of arc lights, he forbade the embassy to keep in
          touch with him. And insisted he would choose a hotel all by
          himself. He did... a non-descript Shivalik Lodge in dingy (by 1983
          standards) Paharganj, which does not even exist now in its original
          form.

          ``He seemed to revel in being rebellious. Which explains his
          insistence on wearing the same jeans for weeks, not shaving and
          keeping his hair long. In fact, he brought just three sets of clothes
          with him,'' recalls Mr Gupta.

          Which also explains why JFK Jr always travelled in rickety
          autorickshaws, making an exception only twice by travelling in Mr
          Gupta's old Fiat car. But when protocol demanded, he couldn't
          refuse breakfast invitations from Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and
          President Giani Zail Singh - both of which turned out to be
          thoroughly eventful.

          ``He came out of Rashtrapati Bhavan perspiring heavily. He told
          me and Jesu, Gianiji took him in a bearhug and wouldn't leave him
          for 20 minutes. Perhaps, he misunderstood the Indian style of being
          affectionate,'' Mr Gupta says. Later, having greedily imbibed the
          intimate details of Indian democracy, he questioned Ms Gandhi on
          several embarrassing points - the need to impose the Emergency,
          corruption, poverty and the Punjab problem.

          But his freedom was shortlived. His mother - Jacqueline
          Kennedy-Onassis - the only person JFK Jr would obey, was
          scheduled to arrive in Delhi for her onward journey to Jaipur to
          visit Maharani Gayatri Devi. Days later, a horrified Jacqueline
          arrived to see her son resembling a near-alien. The mother in her
          took over. He was ordered a thorough wash in the Taj Hotel,
          asked to don a suit and forbidden to even look towards Shivalik
          Lodge.

          He may have grown up for the world. For Jacqueline, he remained
          the three-year-old boy who swung his tiny right arm to salute his
          father's passing casket. That was 1963. Now history repeats itself
          in 1999.