May
Synopsis
Born in 1910, in Skopje, Macedonia, Mother Teresa taught in India for 17 years before she experienced her 1946 “call within a call” to devote herself to caring for the sick and poor. Her order established a hospice; centers for the blind, aged, and disabled; and a leper colony. In 1979 she received the Nobel Peace Prize for her humanitarian work. She died in September 1997 and was beatified in October 2003. In December 2015, Pope Francis recognized a second miracle attributed to Mother Teresa, clearing the way for her to be canonized as a saint in 2016.
Early Life
Catholic nun and missionary Mother Teresa was born on August 26, 1910, in Skopje, the current capital of the Republic of Macedonia. The following day, she was baptized as Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu. Her parents, Nikola and Dranafile Bojaxhiu, were of Albanian descent; her father was an entrepreneur who worked as a construction contractor and a trader of medicines and other goods. The Bojaxhius were a devoutly Catholic family, and Nikola was deeply involved in the local church as well as in city politics as a vocal proponent of Albanian independence.
In 1919, when Agnes was only 8 years old, her father suddenly fell ill and died. While the cause of his death remains unknown, many have speculated that political enemies poisoned him. In the aftermath of her father’s death, Agnes became extraordinarily close to her mother, a pious and compassionate woman who instilled in her daughter a deep commitment to charity.
Although by no means wealthy, Drana Bojaxhiu extended an open invitation to the city’s destitute to dine with her family. “My child, never eat a single mouthful unless you are sharing it with others,” she counseled her daughter. When Agnes asked who the people eating with them were, her mother uniformly responded, “Some of them are our relations, but all of them are our people.”
Religious Calling
Agnes attended a convent-run primary school and then a state-run secondary school. As a girl, she sang in the local Sacred Heart choir and was often asked to sing solos. The congregation made an annual pilgrimage to the Church of the Black Madonna in Letnice, and it was on one such trip at the age of 12 that she first felt a calling to a religious life. Six years later, in 1928, an 18-year-old Agnes Bojaxhiu decided to become a nun and set off for Ireland to join the Sisters of Loreto in Dublin. It was there that she took the name Sister Mary Teresa after Saint Thérèse of Lisieux.
A year later, Sister Mary Teresa traveled on to Darjeeling, India, for the novitiate period; in May 1931, she made her First Profession of Vows. Afterward she was sent to Calcutta, where she was assigned to teach at Saint Mary’s High School for Girls, a school run by the Loreto Sisters and dedicated to teaching girls from the city’s poorest Bengali families. Sister Teresa learned to speak both Bengali and Hindi fluently as she taught geography and history and dedicated herself to alleviating the girls’ poverty through education.
On May 24, 1937, she took her Final Profession of Vows to a life of poverty, chastity and obedience. As was the custom for Loreto nuns, she took on the title of “Mother” upon making her final vows and thus became known as Mother Teresa. Mother Teresa continued to teach at Saint Mary’s, and in 1944 she became the school’s principal. Through her kindness, generosity and unfailing commitment to her students’ education, she sought to lead them to a life of devotion to Christ. “Give me the strength to be ever the light of their lives, so that I may lead them at last to you,” she wrote in prayer.
A New Calling
However, on September 10, 1946, Mother Teresa experienced a second calling, the “call within a call” that would forever transform her life. She was riding in a train from Calcutta to the Himalayan foothills for a retreat when she said Christ spoke to her and told her to abandon teaching to work in the slums of Calcutta aiding the city’s poorest and sickest people.
But since Mother Teresa had taken a vow of obedience, she could not leave her convent without official permission. After nearly a year and a half of lobbying, in January 1948 she finally received approval to pursue this new calling. That August, donning the blue-and-white sari that she would wear in public for the rest of her life, she left the Loreto convent and wandered out into the city. After six months of basic medical training, she voyaged for the first time into Calcutta’s slums with no more specific a goal than to aid “the unwanted, the unloved, the uncared for.”
The Missionaries of Charity
Mother Teresa quickly translated this somewhat vague calling into concrete actions to help the city’s poor. She began an open-air school and established a home for the dying destitute in a dilapidated building she convinced the city government to donate to her cause. In October 1950, she won canonical recognition for a new congregation, the Missionaries of Charity, which she founded with only a handful of members—most of them former teachers or pupils from St. Mary’s School.
As the ranks of her congregation swelled and donations poured in from around India and across the globe, the scope of Mother Teresa’s charitable activities expanded exponentially. Over the course of the 1950s and 1960s, she established a leper colony, an orphanage, a nursing home, a family clinic and a string of mobile health clinics.
In 1971, Mother Teresa traveled to New York City to open her first American-based house of charity, and in the summer of 1982, she secretly went to Beirut, Lebanon, where she crossed between Christian East Beirut and Muslim West Beirut to aid children of both faiths. In 1985, Mother Teresa returned to New York and spoke at the 40th anniversary of the United Nations General Assembly. While there, she also opened Gift of Love, a home to care for those infected with HIV/AIDS.
International Charity and Recognition
In February 1965, Pope Paul VI bestowed the Decree of Praise upon the Missionaries of Charity, which prompted Mother Teresa to begin expanding internationally. By the time of her death in 1997, the Missionaries of Charity numbered more than 4,000—in addition to thousands more lay volunteers—with 610 foundations in 123 countries around the world.
The Decree of Praise was just the beginning, as Mother Teresa received various honors for her tireless and effective charity. She was awarded the Jewel of India, the highest honor bestowed on Indian civilians, as well as the now-defunct Soviet Union’s Gold Medal of the Soviet Peace Committee. And in 1979, Mother Teresa won her highest honor when she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of her work “in bringing help to suffering humanity.”
Controversy
Death and Legacy
After several years of deteriorating health, in which she suffered from heart, lung and kidney problems, Mother Teresa died on September 5, 1997, at the age of 87. She was beatified in October 2003.
Since her death, Mother Teresa has remained in the public spotlight. In particular, the publication of her private correspondence in 2003 caused a wholesale re-evaluation of her life by revealing the crisis of faith she suffered for most of the last 50 years of her life.
In one despairing letter to a confidant, she wrote, “Where is my Faith—even deep down right in there is nothing, but emptiness & darkness—My God—how painful is this unknown pain—I have no Faith—I dare not utter the words & thoughts that crowd in my heart—& make me suffer untold agony.” While such revelations are shocking considering her public image, they have also made Mother Teresa a more relatable and human figure to all those who experience doubt in their beliefs.
For her unwavering commitment to aiding those most in need, Mother Teresa stands out as one of the greatest humanitarians of the 20th century. She combined profound empathy and a fervent commitment to her cause with incredible organizational and managerial skills that allowed her to develop a vast and effective international organization of missionaries to help impoverished citizens all across the globe.
However, despite the enormous scale of her charitable activities and the millions of lives she touched, to her dying day she held only the most humble conception of her own achievements. Summing up her life in characteristically self-effacing fashion, Mother Teresa said, “By blood, I am Albanian. By citizenship, an Indian. By faith, I am a Catholic nun. As to my calling, I belong to the world. As to my heart, I belong entirely to the Heart of Jesus.”
On December 17, 2015, Pope Francis issued a decree that recognized a second miracle attributed to Mother Teresa, clearing the way for her to be canonized as a saint in 2016. The second miracle involved the healing of a man in Santos, Brazil, who was diagnosed with a viral brain infection and lapsed into a coma. His wife, family and friends prayed to Mother Teresa, and when the man was brought to the operating room for emergency surgery, he woke up without pain and cured of his symptoms, according to a statement from the Missionaries of Charity Father. Mother Teresa’s canonization is expected to be scheduled for September 2016 around the date of her death.
Categories
- Algebra (5)
- Apps (52)
- Articles (11)
- Asian History (4)
- Asian History Heritage (13)
- Asian History Heritage Articles (8)
- Asian History Heritage Prayer (1)
- Asian History Heritage Spotlight (9)
- Band (3)
- Biology (11)
- Black History Heritage (39)
- Black History Heritage Articles (17)
- Black History Heritage Links (6)
- Black History Heritage Prayers (12)
- Black History Heritage Spotlight (16)
- Calculus (5)
- Career Counseling (1)
- Chemistry (10)
- Chorus (3)
- Computer Science (3)
- Dance (2)
- Economics (11)
- English (11)
- English Studies (3)
- Environmental Science (12)
- Ethics & Values (13)
- Faith & Culture (12)
- Faith & Culture Articles (7)
- Faith & Culture Prayers (4)
- Faith & Culture Spotlight (4)
- Faith & Religion (9)
- FAQ (3)
- FAQ Gradebook (3)
- French (4)
- Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender (17)
- Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender – Articles (7)
- Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender – Prayers (3)
- Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender – Spotlight (10)
- Geography/Epistemology (6)
- Geometry (4)
- Health (6)
- Inclusive Curriculum at Saint Mary’s (1)
- International Languages (13)
- Irish History & European Cultures (18)
- Irish History & European Cultures – Articles (7)
- Irish History & European Cultures – Prayers (6)
- Irish History & European Cultures – Spotlight (7)
- Islamic History (4)
- Latino & Hispanic History & Heritage (25)
- Latino & Hispanic History & Heritage Articles (13)
- Latino & Hispanic History & Heritage Prayers (5)
- Latino & Hispanic History & Heritage Spotlight (17)
- Learning Management (26)
- Lectures (2)
- Literature (3)
- Marine Biology (9)
- Mathematics (15)
- Multimedia (5)
- Physical Education (2)
- Physical Education & Health (16)
- Physics (10)
- Physiology (8)
- Poetry (3)
- Psychology (10)
- Public Policy (12)
- Register to Vote! (10)
- Register to Vote! – Articles (5)
- Register to Vote! – Links (3)
- Register to Vote! – Prayers (1)
- Register to Vote! – Spotlight (2)
- Religious Studies (21)
- Science (23)
- Scripture (9)
- Senior Project (1)
- Social Justice (13)
- Social Studies (25)
- Spanish (4)
- Sports Medicine (4)
- Statistics (5)
- Student Committee (3)
- Student Committee – 2015-2016 (2)
- Technology Use Guides (8)
- Theater Arts (6)
- Trigonometry (4)
- Uncategorized (6)
- US Government (9)
- US History (10)
- Videos (6)
- Visual & Performing Arts (15)
- Visual Arts (6)
- Women History – Articles (3)
- Women History – Prayers (2)
- Women History – Spotlight (3)
- Womens History (8)
- World History (8)
- World Religions (9)
Post Calendar
M | T | W | T | F | S | S |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 |
18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 |
25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 |
Categories
Archives
- March 2020 (3)
- October 2017 (3)
- September 2017 (3)
- August 2017 (2)
- April 2017 (3)
- February 2017 (13)
- September 2016 (1)
- August 2016 (1)
- May 2016 (28)
- April 2016 (9)
- March 2016 (3)
- February 2016 (94)
- January 2015 (8)
- December 2014 (12)
- September 2014 (1)
- November 2013 (1)
- October 2013 (1)
- May 2013 (2)
- April 2013 (23)
- March 2013 (14)
- February 2013 (13)
- October 2012 (1)
- September 2012 (2)
- January 2012 (1)
Recent Posts
- Distance Learning Resources March 18, 2020
- Visualizing the History of Pandemics March 15, 2020
- Visualizing the History of the World March 15, 2020
- America Georgine Ferrera October 4, 2017
- Sophie Cruz October 3, 2017