Mother Teresa's Journey

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Mother Teresa's Journey

It was 1947 when Mother Teresa decided that living in convent only was

not enough for her to express the greatness of God's love. She was

just taken a final vow as a nun 10 years before when she felt that she

had to do more for the mos disadvantaged. She had had experience

working amongst the poor since the age of eighteen, when she joined

the Lorento Sisters in India. There, although born as Agnes "Gonxha"

Bojaxhia in 1910, she chose to use the name "Sister Teresa", and from

thereon she was known as Mother Teresa. From her home country Albania,

she decided to serve herself entirely in one of the poorest countries

in the world: India.

"Leave the convent and help the poorest of poor and to live with them"

was the message from God that Mother Teresa heard. She understood that

the poor were often overlooked by society, either intentionally or

unintentionally. People seldom want to have anything to do with the

poor, either because they are arrogant, too busy, or because they

cannot stand to see the suffering.

Mother Teresa said, "Blessed are the poor for they have seen." People

who are in the bottom of society could not go any further down for

they have witness the darkest world others do not see. For the poor to

keep their faith to God living is an act of ultimate love. For Mother

Teresa then, to serve such community was simply a humble act of mercy

on God's behalf.

Putting her feet deep on the ground, she started devoting herself to

the poor. First, she opened the first ever school for slum children in

Calcutta. Shortly after in 1952, she opened a home for the dying

called Nirmal Hriday of "Pure Hearts". She also founded home for

babies, caring especially for disadvantaged children, and then she

established a colony for lepers called Shanti Nagar, or "Home of

Peace".

Mother Teresa's tireless act of love was driven by God's love that she

experienced herself.

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