Historical Importance of Mother Teresa:
Mother Teresa founded the
Missionaries of Charity, a Catholic order of nuns dedicated to helping
the poor. Begun in Calcutta, India, the Missionaries of Charity grew to
help the poor, the dying, orphans, lepers, and AIDS sufferers in over a
hundred countries. Mother Teresa's selfless effort to help those in need
has caused many to regard her as a model humanitarian.
Dates: August 26, 1910 -- September 5, 1997
Mother Teresa Also Known As: Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu (birth name), "the Saint of the Gutters"
Overview of Mother Teresa:
Mother Teresa's task was overwhelming. She started out as just one
woman, with no money and no supplies, trying to help the millions of
poor, starving, and dying that lived on the streets of India. Despite
others' misgivings, Mother Teresa was confident that God would provide.
Birth and Childhood
Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, now known as Mother Teresa, was the third and
final child born to her Albanian Catholic parents, Nikola and Dranafile
Bojaxhiu, in the city of Skopje (a predominantly Muslim city in the
Balkans). Nikola was a self-made, successful businessman and Dranafile
stayed home to take care of the children.
When Mother Teresa was about eight years old, her father died
unexpectedly. The Bojaxhiu family was devastated. After a period of
intense grief, Dranafile, suddenly a single mother of three children,
sold textiles and hand-made embroidery to bring in some income.
The Call
Both before Nikola's death and especially after it, the Bojaxhiu family
held tightly to their religious beliefs. The family prayed daily and
went on pilgrimages annually.When Mother Teresa was 12 years old, she began to feel called to serve
God as a nun. Deciding to become a nun was a very difficult decision.
Becoming a nun not only meant giving up the chance to marry and have
children, it also meant giving up all her worldly possessions and her
family, perhaps forever.
For five years, Mother Teresa thought hard about whether or not to
become a nun. During this time, she sang in the church choir, helped her
mother organize church events, and went on walks with her mother to
hand out food and supplies to the poor.
When Mother Teresa was 17, she made the difficult decision to become a
nun. Having read many articles about the work Catholic missionaries were
doing in India, Mother Teresa was determined to go there. Thus, Mother
Teresa applied to the Loreto order of nuns, based in Ireland but with
missions in India.
In September 1928, 18-year-old Mother Teresa said goodbye to her family
to travel to Ireland and then on to India. She never saw her mother or
sister again.
Becoming a Nun
It took more than two years to become a Loreto nun. After spending six
weeks in Ireland learning the history of the Loreto order and to study
English, Mother Teresa then traveled to India, where she arrived on
January 6, 1929. After two years as a novice, Mother Teresa took her
first vows as a Loreto nun on May 24, 1931.
As a new Loreto nun, Mother Teresa (known then only as Sister Teresa, a
name she chose after St. Teresa of Lisieux) settled in to the Loreto
Entally convent in Kolkata (previously called Calcutta) and began teaching history and geography at the convent schools.
Usually, Loreto nuns were not allowed to leave the convent; however, in
1935, 25-year-old Mother Teresa was given a special exemption to teach
at a school outside of the convent, St. Teresa's. After two years at St.
Teresa's, Mother Teresa took her final vows on May 24, 1937 and
officially became "Mother Teresa."
Almost immediately after taking her final vows, Mother Teresa became the
principal of St. Mary's, one of the convent schools and was once again
restricted to live within the convent's walls.
"A Call Within a Call"
For nine years, Mother Teresa continued as the principal of St. Mary's.
Then on September 10, 1946, a day now annually celebrated as
"Inspiration Day," Mother Teresa received what she described as a "call
within a call." She had been traveling on a train to Darjeeling when she
received an "inspiration," a message that told her to leave the convent
and help the poor by living among them.
For two years Mother Teresa patiently petitioned her superiors for
permission to leave the convent in order to follow her call. It was a
long and frustrating process. To her superiors, it seemed dangerous and
futile to send a single woman out into the slums of Kolkata. However, in
the end, Mother Teresa was granted permission to leave the convent for
one year to help the poorest of the poor.
In preparation for leaving the convent, Mother Teresa purchased three
cheap, white, cotton saris, each one lined with three blue stripes along
its edge. (This later became the uniform for the nuns at Mother
Teresa's Missionaries of Charity.) After 20 years with the Loreto order,
Mother Teresa left the convent on August 16, 1948.
Rather than going directly to the slums, Mother Teresa first spent
several weeks in Patna with the Medical Mission Sisters to obtain some
basic medical knowledge. Having learned the basics, 38-year-old Mother
Teresa felt ready to venture out into the slums in December of 1948.
Founding the Missionaries of Charity
Mother Teresa started with what she knew. After walking around the slums
for a while, she found some small children and began to teach them. She
had no classroom, no desks, no chalkboard, and no paper, so she picked
up a stick and began drawing letters in the dirt. Class had begun.
Soon after, Mother Teresa found a small hut that she rented and turned
it into a classroom. Mother Teresa also visited the children's families
and others in the area, offering a smile and limited medical help. As
people began to hear about her work, they gave donations.In March 1949, Mother Teresa was joined by her first helper, a former
pupil from Loreto. Soon she had ten former pupils helping her.
At the end of Mother Teresa's provisionary year, she petitioned to form
her own order of nuns, the Missionaries of Charity. Her request was
granted by Pope Pius XII; the Missionaries of Charity was established on
October 7, 1950.
Helping the Sick, the Dying, the Orphaned, and the Lepers
There were literally millions of people in need in India. Droughts, the
caste system, India's independence, and partition all contributed to the
masses of people that lived on the streets. India's government was
trying, but they could not handle the overwhelming multitudes that
needed help.
While the hospitals were overflowing with patients that had a chance to
survive, Mother Teresa opened a home for the dying, called Nirmal Hriday
("Place of the Immaculate Heart"), on August 22, 1952. Each day, nuns
would walk through the streets and bring people who were dying to Nirmal
Hriday, located in a building donated by the city of Kolkata. The nuns
would bathe and feed these people and then place them in a cot. These
people were given the opportunity to die with dignity, with the rituals
of their faith.
In 1955, the Missionaries of Charity opened their first children's home
(Shishu Bhavan), which cared for orphans. These children were housed and
fed and given medical aid. When possible, the children were adopted
out. Those not adopted were given an education, learned a trade skill,
and found marriages.
In India's slums, huge numbers of people were infected with leprosy, a
disease that can lead to major disfiguration. At the time, lepers
(people infected with leprosy) were ostracized, often abandoned by their
families. Because of the widespread fear of lepers, Mother Teresa
struggled to find a way to help these neglected people. Mother Teresa
eventually created a Leprosy Fund and a Leprosy Day to help educate the
public about the disease and established a number of mobile leper
clinics (the first opened in September 1957) to provide lepers with
medicine and bandages near their homes. By the mid-1960s, Mother Teresa
had established a leper colony called Shanti Nagar ("The Place of
Peace") where lepers could live and work.
International Recognition
Just before the Missionaries of Charity celebrated its 10th anniversary,
they were given permission to establish houses outside of Calcutta, but
still within India. Almost immediately, houses were established in
Delhi, Ranchi, and Jhansi; more soon followed.
For their 15th anniversary, the Missionaries of Charity was given
permission to establish houses outside of India. The first house was
established in Venezuela in 1965. Soon there were Missionaries of
Charity houses all around the world.
As Mother Teresa's Missionaries of Charity expanded at an amazing rate,
so did international recognition for her work. Although Mother Teresa
was awarded numerous honors, including the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979,
she never took personal credit for her accomplishments. She said it was
God's work and that she was just the tool used to facilitate it.
Controversy
With international recognition also came critique. Some people
complained that the houses for the sick and dying were not sanitary,
that those treating the sick were not properly trained in medicine, that
Mother Teresa was more interested in helping the dying go to God than
in potentially helping cure them. Others claimed that she helped people
just so she could convert them to Christianity.
Mother Teresa also caused much controversy when she openly spoke against
abortion and birth control. Others critiqued her because they believed
that with her new celebrity status, she could have worked to end the
poverty rather than soften its symptoms.
Old and Frail
Despite the controversy, Mother Teresa continued to be an advocate for
those in need. In the 1980s, Mother Teresa, already in her 70s, opened
Gift of Love homes in New York, San Francisco, Denver, and Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia for AIDS sufferers.Throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, Mother Teresa's health
deteriorated, but she still traveled the world, spreading her message.
When Mother Teresa, age 87, died of heart failure on September 5, 1997,
the world mourned her passing. Hundreds of thousands of people lined the
streets to see her body, while millions more watched her state funeral
on television. After the funeral, Mother Teresa's body was laid to rest
at the Mother House of the Missionaries of Charity in Kolkata. When Mother Teresa passed away, she left behind over 4,000 Missionary of Charity Sisters, in 610 centers in 123 countries.
After Mother Teresa's death, the Vatican began the lengthy process of
canonization. On October 19, 2003, the third of the four steps to
sainthood was completed when the Pope approved Mother Teresa's
beatification, awarding Mother Teresa the title "Blessed."
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