Mother Teresa Mother Teresa of Calcutta (1910-1997), Roman Catholic nun, founder of the Missionaries of Charity, and recipient of the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of her humanitarian work (see Nobel Prizes). In 2003, six years after her death, Mother Teresa began a passage to sainthood with her beatification by Pope John Paul II. Beatification is the first step toward canonization, the act that proclaims a person's sainthood.
Mother Teresa was born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu on August 27, 1910, to Albanian parents in Skopje, which at the time was under the rule of the Ottoman Empire. (The city is now the capital of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.) At the age of 12, she decided to become a nun. At age 18, she joined the Order of the Sisters of Our Lady of Loreto in Ireland. After training in Dublin for a few months, she went to Drjiling (Darjeeling), India, where the order had missions. When she took her first religious vows there in 1931, she chose the name Teresa for Saint Theresa of Lisieux, the patron saint of foreign missionaries. For the next 15 years she taught at Saint Mary's High School in Calcutta (now Kolkata). Disturbed by the presence of the sick and dying in the city's streets, she felt called, in her words, "to leave the convent and help the poor, while living among them." In 1948 she was granted permission to leave the convent and work as an independent nun. That year she founded the Missionaries of Charity, a religious order to help the sick and destitute.
In 1950 the Missionaries of Charity received official approval from the Roman Catholic Church, and Mother Teresa became a citizen of India. Members take four vows on acceptance by the religious order. 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 Mother Teresa opened the Nirmal Hriday (Pure Heart) Home for Dying Destitutes in Calcutta. She also opened orphanages, hospitals for lepers, and other homes. By the time of her Nobel Prize, branches of the Missionaries of Charity had been established in many countries. In awarding the prize, the Nobel Committee cited her work in "bringing help to suffering humanity." She was forced to scale back her activities in 1990 because of declining health. Mother Teresa: In My Own Words, a collection of her anecdotes and quotations, was published in 1996. In 1997, because of Mother Teresa's poor health, Sister Nirmala was chosen to succeed her as leader of the Missionaries of Charity. People around the world mourned her death on September 5, 1997.
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Courtesy of Encarta
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This Information has been provided in preparation for the LIVE ON-LINE INTERVIEW and WORKSHOP of Author Maryanne Raphael {book - "WHAT MOTHER TERESA TAUGHT ME"} ~ to provide participants with background information on Mother Teresa.
INTERVIEW and WORKSHOP to be held WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25TH, starting at 8:00 p.m. ~ Eastern Time ~ in the Dream Depths Gather Group. Your Hostesses for the INTERVIEW ~ Jennifer N. and RenéAllen ~ {also serving as WORKSHOP CO-ORDINATORS}. Jennifer and René are the Owners of the Gather Group ~ Dream Depths.
The WORKSHOP will immediately follow the INTERVIEW {to begin at approximately 8:45 p.m.} of Maryanne Raphael wherein participants may ask questions concerning the book Authored by Maryanne Raphael ~ "WHAT MOTHER TERESA TAUGHT ME", as well as anything about Maryanne's wisdom gained from Mother Teresa.
The INTERVIEW and WORKSHOP promise to be both fascinating and insightful!
YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND! Just JOIN US in the Dream Depths Gather Group. You will find both the INTERVIEW and the WORKSHOP in the FEATURED ARTICLES section of the Group.WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU THERE!
Maryanne Raphael, Jennifer N., and René Allen


Comments: 37
What is sometimes more immediately important to us, and is all too easily forgotten, is the powerful effect those, who are physically close to us during our individual development, have on us. I wonder if we can add comments, just to widen the scope of this idea.
Thanks.
for a profound life also) who after joining the 'Missionaries of Charity'
are going under training for five years (I came to know from them as
student of meditation) when they came to attend 'Vipassana' Meditation
that it is compulsory to attend the said meditation atleast twice at the
initial stages of this training as inmate worker of the Charity mission !!!
I hope i remember to come listen
Looking forward to Wednesday Love and prayers Maryanne
You may have questions that you'd like to direct to Maryanne and it will help all those in attendance to understand what you'd like for us to gain in relation to the powerful effect those, who are physically close to us during our individual development, have on us. I wonder if we can add comments, just to widen the scope of this idea. ~ Jerome
This will be very interesting Jerome ~ And, WE would love to have you amongst us during both the INTERVIEW and WORKSHOP. WE hope that you will be with us tomorrow evening LIVE ON-LINE.
Blessings ~
Rene
Blessings ~
Rene
Thank you so much for stopping by and commenting, and you know WE want you to be at both Events! {wink}.
Blessings ~
Your Friend,
Rene
We'll SEE YOU at the INTERVIEW and WORKSHOP . . .
Thank you for your comments of JOY!
Blessings ~
Your Friend,
Rene
WE'll see you there!
Blessings ~
Rene
We'd like to hear more from you on what you have discovered. Especially with regard to the training in Meditation that you've mentioned.
WE hope that you will come to the INTERVIEW and WORKSHOP and talk more with Maryanne Raphael.
Blessings ~
Your Friend,
Rene
Thank you for your kind words about Mother Teresa.
WE really would like you to be present tomorrow evening.
Blessings ~
Rene
WE really hope to see you tomorrow evening. The INTERVIEW starts at 8:00 p.m. ~ Eastern Time, and the WORKSHOP begins right after ~ at approximately 8:45 p.m. in the Dream Depths Gather Group.
Thank you for stopping by and leaving your kind words about Mother Teresa.
Blessings ~
Rene
Thank you for what you've blessed us with here! Thank you.
POWERFUL WORDS, and very INSPIRATIONAL!
WE want you to be present at the Events!
I especially like what you've said . . . "The explanation for all she accomplished, the love and comfort she gave, all that she was, IS that she was smack dab in the middle of God's will for her life!" ~ Sandy
And, this particular quote by Mother Teresa that you left us with resounds within me . . .
"Sweetest Lord, make me appreciative of the dignity of my high vocation, and its many responsibilities. Never permit me to disgrace it by giving way to coldness, unkindness, or impatience." ~ Mother Teresa
Blessings ~
Your Friend,
Rene
Thank you so much for your words.
Looking forward to this!
Your Friend,
Rene
HUGS ~
Rene
I missed you ~ you know ~ Lots of love for all you have done to inspire me.
Love,
Rene
Don't pop me with a ruler for my english Teacher {smiles}.
WE look forward to seeing you tonight!
Your Friend,
Rene
Now, me and Jen are going to have to figure out who is going to Journal this for us ~ smiling . . . {don't cough} ~ lol.
Blessings ~
Your Friend,
Rene
This will be WONDERFUL this evening! Aren't you EXCITED. . .
Your Friend,
Rene
Is she happy with what she has done while here? who knows!
I was thinking about perhaps, for example, an aunt or uncle we might have had, who was a constant force for good, an encouraging and positive person who, no matter what troubles they had, always seemed to have time for us and whom we remember their input into our lives long after they have gone. The point was, as much as more distant celebrities are, or seem, attractiv, that special aunt or uncle are more directly important to us because of that personal relationship with us, their anecdotes, their memories and their encouragement.
May she RIP.