In 1946, while riding a train to Darjeeling to make a
retreat, Sister Teresa heard what she later explained as “a call within a call.
The message was clear. I was to leave the convent and help the poor while
living among them.” She also heard a call to give up her life with the Sisters
of Loreto and, instead, to “follow Christ into the slums to serve him among the
poorest of the poor.”
After receiving permission to leave Loreto, establish a new
religious community, and undertake her new work, she took a nursing course for
several months. She returned to Calcutta, where she lived in the slums and
opened a school for poor children. Dressed in a white sari and sandals (the
ordinary dress of an Indian woman) she soon began getting to know her
neighbors—especially the poor and sick—and getting to know their needs through
visits. The work was exhausting, but
she was not alone for long. Volunteers who came to join her in the work, some
of them former students, became the core of the Missionaries of Charity. Others
helped by donating food, clothing, supplies, the use of buildings. In 1952 the
city of Calcutta gave Mother Teresa a former hostel, which became a home for
the dying and the destitute. As the order expanded, services were also offered
to orphans, abandoned children, alcoholics, the aging, and street people. For the next four decades, Mother Teresa worked tirelessly on
behalf of the poor. Her love knew no bounds. Nor did her energy, as she
crisscrossed the globe pleading for support and inviting others to see the face
of Jesus in the poorest of the poor. In 1979 she was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize. On September 5, 1997, God called her home.
Saturday 5 September 2020
St Teresa of Calcutta
Mother Teresa of Calcutta,
the tiny woman recognized throughout the world for her work among the poorest
of the poor, was canonized on September 4, 2016. Among those present were hundreds of
Missionaries of Charity, the order she founded in 1950 as a diocesan religious
community. Today the congregation also includes contemplative sisters and
brothers and an order of priests. Born on August 27, 1910, to Albanian parents in what is now
Skopje, Macedonia (then part of the Ottoman Empire), Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu was
the youngest of the three children who survived. For a time, the family lived
comfortably, and her father's construction business thrived. But life changed
overnight following his unexpected death. During her years in public school, Agnes participated in a
Catholic sodality and showed a strong interest in the foreign missions. At age
18 she entered the Loreto Sisters of Dublin, Ireland. It was 1928 when she said
goodbye to her mother for the final time and made her way to a new land and a
new life. The following year she was sent to the Loreto novitiate in
Darjeeling, India. There she chose the name Teresa and prepared for a life of
service. She was assigned to a high school for girls in Calcutta, where she
taught history and geography to the daughters of the wealthy. But she could not
escape the realities around her—the poverty, the suffering, the overwhelming
numbers of destitute people.
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