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Mother Teresa

Mother Teresa

By Bishesta PaudelPublished 2 years ago 5 min read
Image extracted from holymassimages.blogspot.com

During the last two decades of her life, Mother Teresa suffered from various health problems, but nothing prevented her from fulfilling her mission to serve the poor and needy. She spent many years in Calcutta, India, where she founded the Missionaries of Charity, a religious community dedicated to helping those most in need. In 1979, Mother Teresa received the Nobel Peace Prize for her humanitarian work. In 1979, Mother Teresa received the Nobel Peace Prize for her endless work and compassion for the poor.

With the power of love and compassion she radiated, Mother Teresa was a messenger of hope for our world. And we need this message today as much as when it was with us. President Pratibha Patil said: “Dressed in a white saree with a blue border, she and the Sisters of the Missionaries of Charity became a symbol of hope for many: the old, the destitute, the unemployed, the sick, the terminally ill., and those abandoned by their families.

She was an Albanian Catholic nun who came to India to found the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta and obtained Indian citizenship. Little is known about her childhood, but at an early age, she felt called to be a nun and serve by helping the poor.

At 18, she was allowed to join a group of nuns in Ireland. A few months after she befriended the Loreta sisters, she was allowed to travel to India. In 1928 she traveled to Ireland to join the Lorraine Sisters of the College of Notre Dame and six weeks later sailed to India where she taught at the Knights of Calcutta (Kolkata) school for 17 years.

Mother Teresa founded the Missionaries of Charity, a Catholic church serving women, especially in India, with many service centers for the blind, the elderly, and the disabled. In the 1980s, Mother Teresa, now 70, opened "Gift of Love" homes for people living with AIDS in New York, San Francisco, Denver, and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Mother Teresa's charitable activities grew exponentially with the increase in the number of parishioners and donations from all over India and the world.

His order founded an orphanage; centers for the blind, elderly and disabled; and leper colonies. At the time of Mother Teresa's death, her order included hundreds of centers in more than 90 countries, employing about 4,000 nuns and hundreds of thousands of lay people.

Pope Francis officially announced that Mother Teresa would be canonized in March 2016 when he acknowledged the second miracle attributed to her. According to Avvenire, a newspaper linked to the Catholic Church, a Brazilian man with multiple brain tumors was cured after his loved ones prayed to Mother Teresa. Mother Teresa, a Catholic nun who dedicated her life to helping the poor in India, was declared a saint at a canonization Mass hosted by Pope Francis at the Vatican.

India renamed the city of Calcutta as Calcutta in 2001 to match the Bengali pronunciation. She chose to take her name from Thérèse de Lisieux, the patron saint of missionaries; [29] [30] Since this name was already chosen by a nun from the convent, she chose the Spanish spelling (Teresa).

After becoming the new nun at Loreto, Mother Teresa (then known simply as Mother Teresa, a name she chose in honor of St. Teresa of Liche) settled in Lore, Calcutta (formerly Calcutta) at the Tor-Entali Convent and began to teach history and geography in Calcutta. convent school. At eighteen, she left her parents' home in Skopje to join the Sisters of Loreto, a community of Irish nuns who preached in India. She was later sent to Calcutta where she was assigned to teach at St. Mary's High School for Girls, a school run by Sister Loreto dedicated to educating girls from the poorest Bengali families in the city.

However, the pervasive poverty of Calcutta deeply influenced Mother Teresa's thinking, and in 1948 she received permission from her superiors to leave the convent school and devote herself to work in Calcutta's poorest slums. After arriving in India, he started working as a teacher. However, she was impressed by the pervasive poverty in Calcutta, prompting her to find a new organization called the Missionaries of Charity.

The main purpose of this mission was to take care of people that no one else wanted to take care of. It was there that he felt called to serve the dying and the poor on the streets of Calcutta.

While recovering from tuberculosis, the dedicated missionary who taught geography in a high school in Calcutta felt her professional calling. Born in Macedonia to parents of Albanian descent, Mother Teresa experienced her "vocation within a vocation" in 1946 after 17 years of teaching in India. was active in 133 countries in 2012. Beginning in Calcutta, India, the Missionaries of Charity have grown to help the poor, dying, orphans, lepers, and AIDS patients in more than 100 countries.

Mother Teresa, real name Agnes Gonja Boyadzhiu, (baptized August 27, 1910, Skopje, Ottoman Macedonia [now Republic of North Macedonia] – September 5, 1997, Calcutta, India [now Calcutta]; September 4, 1997, Canonization Day, 2016; feast 5 September), founder of the Missionary of Charity Medal, a women's Catholic Church dedicated to serving the poor, especially the disadvantaged, in India. After eighteen years in Skopje, she moved to Ireland and then to India, where she spent most of her life. At the age of 12, she decided that she wanted to become a missionary and spread the love of Christ.

On September 10, 1946, Mother Maria Teresa, 36, traveled 400 miles by train after teaching the Loreto Sisters in Calcutta, an open community focused on education in Ireland (645 km) for 17 years. ) in Darjeeling. Working alone, her superiors order her to take a break from her annual retreat in the foothills of the Himalayas. Although Teresa offered to resign as head of the mission charity, the sisters of the congregation voted by secret ballot for her to remain and she agreed to continue.

Monica sought medical attention, but because she had tuberculosis before cancer, she was too weak for surgery. Monica Besra said that a beam of light emanated from the image that healed the cancerous tumor.

A giant portrait of Mother Teresa, whom the church credits with two miraculous healings of the sick, was hung in St Peter's Cathedral during a colorful ceremony. On December 17, 2015, Pope Francis issued a decree recognizing the second miracle attributed to Mother Teresa, paving the way for her canonization as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church. The alleged miracle involved Monica Besra, a 30-year-old woman from Calcutta who prayed to a nun cured of stomach cancer.

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Bishesta Paudel

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    BPWritten by Bishesta Paudel

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