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Mother Teresa


Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu was born on Aug 27, 1919 in Shkup, Albania (now Skopje, Macedonia) as the youngest of three children in a middle class family.


 
As a child Agnes sang in a choir and also played the mandolin.


 

At the age of twelve she felt for the first time the desire to spend her life for Gods' work. She prayed a lot over it and talked about it with her family. She asked her father: "How can I be sure?" He answered: "Through your joy. If you feel really happy by the idea that God might call you to serve Him, then this is the evidence that you have a call."

In her teens, Agnes became a member of a youth group in her local parish. Through her involvement with the group she developed an interest in the activities of missionaries. She had a strong desire to help the poor and needy.
When she was only 17, Agnes took up the vocation of a Catholic missionary nun. She went to Ireland and joined the Irish order, the Sisters of Loretto, a community known for their missionary work in India. When she took her vows as a Sister of Loretto, she chose the name Teresa after Saint Thérèse of Lisieux. Six weeks later, Teresa set sail to Calcutta, India to serve as a teacher.
In Calcutta, Sister Teresa as she was known taught geography and catechism (a way of teaching the bible) at St. Mary's High School. In 1944, she became the principal of St. Mary's. In the same year she contracted tuberculosis, and was sent to Darjeeling for rest and recuperation. It was on the train to Darjeeling that she received her second call -- "the call within the call". Mother Teresa recalled later,

"I was to leave the convent and work with the poor, living among them…to be God's Love in action to the poorest of the poor. That was the beginning of the Missionaries of Charity."
mother teresa,pictures,quotes,biography,nformation,ife,prayer She sought the permission of the Vatican to leave the Sisters of Loretto and pursue her desire of helping the poor in 1948. She was granted permission on the condition that she would not give up her vows. Sister Teresa started a school in the slums to teach the children of the poor. She also learned basic medicine and nursing and went into the homes of the sick to treat them.

In 1949, some of her former pupils joined her. The group rented a room so they could care for helpless people otherwise condemned to die in the gutter. Mother Teresa adopted Indian citizenship, and her nuns followed her practice of wearing a white sari with a blue border (representing God's will) as their habit.

In 1950, the group was established by the Church as a Diocesan Congregation of the Calcutta Diocese. It was named the Missionaries of Charity. Members of the congregation take four vows on acceptance by the religious community. In addition to the three basic vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, a fourth vow is required pledging service to the poor, whom Mother Teresa described as the embodiment of Christ.
In 1952, the Missionaries opened their first 'Home for the Dying', 'Nirmal Hriday' (Pure heart) in space made available by the Calcutta Municipal authorities near a Kali temple. She and her fellow nuns gathered dying Indians off the streets of Calcutta and brought them to this home to care for them in their last days. Ever since then, thousands of men, women and children have been taken from the streets of Calcutta and transported to Nirmal Hriday. Under Mother Teresa's guidance, the Missionaries of Charity have also built, near Asansol, India, a leper colony called 'Shanti Nagar' (Town of Peace).

 
In an interview with Malcolm Muggeridge, in the book 'Something Beautiful for God', Mother Teresa tells how she for the first time picked up a woman from the street. "The woman was half eaten up by rats and ants. I took her to the hospital, but they could do nothing for her. They only took her because I refused to go home unless something was done for her. After they cared for her, I went straight to the town hall and asked for a place where I could take these people, because that day I found more people dying in the street. The employee of health services brought me to the temple of Kali and showed me the "dormashalah" where the pilgrims used to rest after they worshipped the goddess Kali. The building was empty and he asked me if I wanted it. I was very glad with the offer for many reasons, but especially because it was the center of prayer for Hindus. Within 24 hours we brought our sick and suffering and started the Home for the Dying Destitutes."


 

Today there are over 450 homes of the Missionaries in various parts of the world. The mission has grown from 12 to thousands serving the "poorest of the poor" in 450 centers from America to Albania. In 1966, the Missionaries of Charity Brothers was founded.
Mother Teresa gained worldwide recognition with her tireless efforts for the world's sick and homeless. Her work brought her numerous humanitarian awards, including the Pope John XXIII Peace Prize and the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.
Fundu Fact
Mother Teresa was always thinking of ways to help the poor. When she was invited to receive the Nobel Prize in 1979 she insisted on a departure from the ceremonial banquet and asked that the funds for the same ($6,000) should be donated to the poor in Calcutta. Mother Teresa's reason - the money saved on just one banquet could help her to feed hundreds for a year.
Beginning in 1980, homes began to spring-up for drug addicts, prostitutes, battered women, and more orphanages and schools for poor children around the world.
In 1985, Mother Teresa established the first hospice for AIDS victims in New York, U.S. In 1991, Mother Teresa returned for the first time to her native Albania (now known as Serbia) and opened a home in Tirana. By this year, there were 168 homes established in India alone.
Mother Teresa travelled around the world in her quest. She reached out to help the hungry in Ethiopia,
radiation victims at Chernobyl, and earthquake victims in Armenia. In 1982, during the siege of Beirut, she convinced the Israeli army and Palestinian guerillas to stop shooting long enough for her to rescue 37 children trapped in a front-line hospital. For the Mother, no place was too dangerous for her, no destination too distant.
In November of 1996, Mother Teresa received the honorary U.S. citizenship with the Medal of Freedom, the highest U.S. civilian award.

 
Mother was helped in her cause by various well-wishers. She recalls an incident:
"Once a chairman of a multinational company came to see me, to offer me a property in Bombay, he first asked: 'Mother, how do you manage your budget?" I asked him who had sent him here. He replied: 'I felt an urge inside me.' I said: "Other people like you come to see me and say the same. It was clear God sent you, Mr. A, as He sends Mr. X, Mrs. Y, Miss Z, and they provide the material means we need for our work. The grace of God is what moved you. You are my budget. God sees to our needs, as Jesus promised."


 

Mother Teresa has had more than her fair share of criticism. In 1994 a British television documentary, "Hell's Angel: Mother Teresa of Calcutta," accused her of taking donations without questioning the sources. She has also received some criticism for her strong views against abortion and divorce. Throughout her life Mother was unaffected by criticism, stating, "No matter who says what, you should accept it with a smile and do your own work."
In the late 80s her declining health meant that she could no longer carry on her work as actively as before. In 1990 she decided to step down as head of the Misssionaries but was voted back by all but one (herself). She finally stepped down on March 13 1997. Sister Nirmala was chosen to succeed her.

 
Nirmala whose name means 'pure' was born into a Nepali family in the state of Bihar and was trained as a lawyer before joining Missionaries of Charity. She had supervised the order's centers in Europe and the United States and since 1979, led the contemplative wing of the order, in which nuns devote their lives to meditation, before she took over as head of the mission. She is aided in her work by a council of four members.


 


Mother Teresa passed away on September 5, 1997 following a massive heart attack. She was 87. The inscription on her tombstone reads "Love one another, as I have loved you"
 
The poor give us much more than we give them. They're such strong people, living day to day with no food. And they never curse, never complain. We don't have to give them pity or sympathy. We have so much to learn from them.

 
Sainthood

Shortly after Mother Teresa's passing, her name was recommended for sainthood. There is normally a rule that requires a five-year wait after death to begin the process of sainthood. But it was waived by the Pope in her case. Still the formal process of sainthood will take a couple of years. The church follows a strict set of rules in the process. First, to determine who qualifies, the Vatican looks to its Congregation for the "Causes of Saints" or proof that the life of the candidate was a model of holiness. Once the applicant is approved as a candidate, interviews with people who knew the candidate are held and a position paper is prepared. If the evidence proves a life of "heroic virtue", the person is given the title "venerable" by the Pope. The next title, beatified (blessed), is attained if it can be proven that a miracle occurred after the death of the candidate, the result of someone praying to that person for help. To finalize a canonization, it must be established that a second miracle occurred. Verifying a miracle is considered the most difficult hurdle in the process.

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