Pakistan’s answer to Mother Teresa, Ruth Pfau, dies

German-born nun Ruth Pfau (Reuters)
Updated 10 August 2017
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Pakistan’s answer to Mother Teresa, Ruth Pfau, dies

DUBAI: Pakistan’s answer to Mother Teresa, Ruth Pfau, a doctor and nun who dedicated her life to eradicating leprosy in Pakistan died in Karachi on Friday aged 87.
Born in Leipzig in 1929, she saw her home destroyed by bombing during World War Two.
Her order sent her to southern India having completed her studies in medicine. But she was stranded in Karachi because of a visa issue and it was then that she became aware of leprosy.
Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said Dr. Pfau “may have been born in Germany, but her heart was always in Pakistan,” the BBC reported.
“Dr. Ruth came to Pakistan here at the dawn of a young nation, looking to make lives better for those afflicted by disease, and in doing so, found herself a home,” Abbasi added.
She started to set up clinics across Pakistan after visiting the country in 1960 and witnessing leprosy for the first time.
From then onwards she dedicated herself to the fight against the disease, and by 1996 it was declared to have been brought under control.
“Actually the first patient who really made me decide was a young Pathan,” she once told the BBC. “He crawled on hands and feet into this dispensary, acting as if this was quite normal, as if someone has to crawl there through that slime and dirt on hands and feet, like a dog.”
Here work saw her rescue disfigured and suffering children who had been left in caves and cattle pens – their parents afraid they were contagious.
She trained the country’s doctors and attracted foreign donations. She founded Pakistan’s “National Leprosy Control Programme” and the “Marie Adelaide Leprosy Center,” which exist across the nation.
She was praised for her work helping the victims of the 2010 floods in south-west Pakistan.
And she received a number of honors, including, in 1979, Pakistan’s second highest civilian award: the Hilal-e-Imtiaz; in 1989 she received the Hilal-e-Pakistan and the German Staufer Medal in 2015.


Filipinos celebrate Christmas on a budget amid soaring costs

Children spend the afternoon at Quezon Memorial Circle in Quezon City, Philippines on Dec. 23, 2025. (PNA)
Updated 55 min 52 sec ago
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Filipinos celebrate Christmas on a budget amid soaring costs

  • Filipinos are choosing modest Christmas gifts, scaling down year-end festivities
  • Millions look to content creators for tips on how to spend less for Christmas dinner

MANILA: As the predominantly Catholic Philippines celebrates one of its most important annual holidays on Thursday, many Filipinos have been forced to rethink their traditional Christmas celebrations amid soaring prices. 

This year, street food vendor Gemma Gracia is among those who will keep her business open during the holidays. 

“As a vendor, I’ve felt the prices go up since I also still buy at the market for our needs and for our selling needs,” she told Arab News. 

But as celebrating Christmas was important for her family, the 39-year-old has allocated 1,000 Philippine pesos ($17) for a family meal out at Jollibee, the Philippines’ biggest fast-food chain restaurant. 

“When you don’t have food to share on the table on this holiday, it’s a sad day. That’s why we make sure that we always have something on the table each year,” she said. 

For many Filipinos, the time-honored traditions of Noche Buena, or Christmas Eve, is the most awaited part of this holiday season, when dinner tables across the country are filled with a hearty selection of traditional dishes. 

Noche Buena, which is Spanish for “the good night,” is the dinner that follows the last evening mass of the season, known as misa de gallo or simbang gabi.

In the Philippines, such festive staples include meaty Filipino-style spaghetti and hamonado, the local version of a Christmas ham that usually serves as the centerpiece of Christmas dinner tables.

But the pinch from rising prices has affected Filipino shoppers in recent years, forcing them to adjust according to their budget. 

Although the country’s central bank said inflation had eased to 1.5 percent in November, many say the statistics do not reflect on-the-ground realities, where people reel from rising retail prices, shrinking portions and diminishing purchasing power of the peso. 

Allan Manansala, a 48-year-old construction worker in Manila, told Arab News that he is expecting to spend 5,000 pesos for his family of five in 2025, nearly a third of his monthly wage and about a fifth higher than what he spent in previous years. 

“I might have to skip giving my children gifts this year because of the costs,” he said. 

To get around the high costs, Manansala is skipping the Noche Buena festivities altogether and has instead decided to splurge on New Year’s Eve dinner, which is also a significant occasion in the Philippines. 

Others, like Allan Melenio, look for different ways to save up. 

“Our relative owns a meat shop, so we’re able to save on that since the prices are quite low,” he told Arab News. “But everywhere else, a piece of meat can cost so much.” 

While the economy has forced Filipinos to make smarter choices and get creative, content creators are among those offering ideas to address consumers’ woes, teaching people how to stretch their meager budgets for the holidays. 

One such tip came from Ninong Ry, a food content creator who challenged himself to prepare an eight-dish Noche Buena dinner with a budget of 1,500 pesos. Posted about two weeks before Christmas, his one-hour YouTube video has since garnered more than 1.4 million views. 

The video was also a response to comments from Philippine Trade Secretary Cristina Aldeguer-Roque, who suggested last month that 500 pesos was enough for a family of four to host a modest Christmas Eve dinner, sparking anger among Filipinos who said she was out of touch with reality. 

Jelmark Toqueb, who works as a plumber in Manila, said that the 500-peso budget was unrealistic. 

“It is clearly not enough. (Five hundred pesos) is not even enough for you to cook spaghetti with meat. Maybe just the noodles and the sauce,” he told Arab News.

For 32-year-old Toqueb and his wife, who works as a public school teacher, the holiday season remains a cherished occasion to spend quality time with the family. As their Christmas tradition involves gift-giving, he chose more modest presents this year to circumvent the high costs. 

“The prices now are different even from last year, (when they were) already high,” Toqueb said. “Even if the gift is simple, it’s fine. It’s the thought that counts.”