Mother Teresa
Synopsis
Baptized on August 27, 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. She was summoned to Rome in 1968, and in 1979 received the Nobel Peace
Prize for her humanitarian work.
Catholic nun and missionary Mother Teresa was born circa August 26, 1910
(her date of birth is disputed), in Skopje, the current capital of the Republic
of Macedonia. On August 27, 1910, a date frequently cited as her birthday, she
was baptized as Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu. Mother Teresa's 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 Bojaxhiu was
deeply involved in the local church as well as in city politics as a vocal
proponent of Albanian independence.
In 1919, when Mother Teresa 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, Mother Teresa 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 Mother Teresa 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."
Mother Teresa attended a convent-run primary school and then a state-run
secondary school. As a girl, Mother Teresa sang in the local Sacred Heart choir
and was often asked to sing solos. The congregation made an annual pilgrimage
to the chapel of the Madonna of Letnice atop Black Mountain in Skopje, and it
was on one such trip at the age of 12 that Mother Teresa 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 Loreto Sisters of
Dublin. It was there that she took the name Sister Mary Teresa after Saint
Thérèse of Lisieux.
A year later, Mother Teresa traveled on to Darjeeling, India for the
novitiate period; in May 1931, Mother Teresa 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. Mother 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.
Mother Teresa is a person who we recoder with love and respect for much fight human rights are today in force. It is the duty of all teachers worldwide spread their difficult and challenging task.
ResponderEliminarI leave this image that i thought was very nice to share with you.
I leave this phrase that I thought was very nice to share with you.
"Sometimes we feel that what we do is just a drop in the ocean, but the ocean would be less that missing drop"
Read the text and decide if the following sentences are true or false.
Eliminar1. She was summoned to Rome in 1967.
2. She not received the Nobel Peace Prize for her humanitarian work.
3. When Mother Teresa was only 20 years old, her father died.
4. In May 1931, Mother Teresa made her First Profession of Vows.
5. In 1944 she became the school's principal.
Very nice article and video about a great person who devoted her life to the poor. Good questions, remember that the negative in the past is expressed with "did not" (question 2). Good work, Jessica.
ResponderEliminar