Mother Teresa: Auntie To The World
Written By Savvy Auntie Staff Writers
By Melanie Linn Gutowski (2010) and updated on September 7, 2016 by Savvy Auntie Staff Writers
On Sunday, September 4, Mother Teresa was canonized as a Saint by Pope Francis in front of 120,000 people who had gathered in St. Peter’s Square for the ceremony. In honor of Saint Mother Teresa, we are republishing a story we published in 2010 on how Mother Teresa was an "Auntie to the World."
And just below, an article we shared about her nephew and his aunt's influence on his life, and the people she touched around the world.
Mother Teresa: Auntie To The World
Quite
possibly the most famous ABC (Auntie By Choice) in the world, Mother
Teresa dedicated most of her life to caring for others. Her good works
are renowned around the world and her name is synonymous with
selflessness and charity. Though she has been gone for nearly 13 years,
her life’s work continues to inspire people everywhere to help those
around them.
Albanian by birth, the girl who would become Mother
Teresa felt a calling to become a missionary at the young age of 18. She joined the Sisters of Loreto in Ireland in 1928 and was given the
name Sister Mary Teresa after St. Thérèse of Lisieux, who had fittingly
been named the Universal Patron of the Missions in following her own
canonization in 1927.
Sister Teresa, as she was then known, was
sent to Calcutta in 1929 and taught at her order’s school for girls. It
was not until 1946 that she felt the call to do more for the neglected
poor in India.
She was given permission in 1948 to begin her
ministry with the Little Sisters of the Poor, and two years later her
own congregation of the Missionaries of Charity was officially
established. She eventually opened missions on six continents and in
almost all communist and formerly communist countries, including the
former Soviet Union, China and Cuba.
She won the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1979, famously requesting that the money traditionally used to
honor the Nobel Laureate with a banquet instead be donated to the poor
of Calcutta. The Nobel Prize was one of many honors she would be
awarded in her lifetime.
In October 2003, Pope John Paul II took
the first step in formalizing what many people had been insisting for
years: the beloved Mother Teresa was a saint. She was beatified and is now known as Blessed Teresa of Calcutta. The centenary of her birth [was] celebrated in August 2010.
Though
she led by example, Mother Teresa also spoke words of wisdom to inspire
others to continue her work. Aunties everywhere can relate to her sentiments:
"Speak
tenderly to them. Let there be kindness in your face, in your eyes, in
your smile, in the warmth of your greeting. Always have a cheerful
smile. Don't only give your care, but give your heart as well."
Photo: Manfredo Ferrari, Wikipedia Commons
Republished: September 7, 2016