MOTHER TERESA: A Biography

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were asking our Lady of Fatima to obtain for us the new house
we needed.^13

Finally, a suitable house was found at 54A Lower Circular Road. The
home, which belonged to a former Muslim magistrate, was bought by the
diocese of Calcutta with the understanding that Mother Teresa would
pay back the loan. In February 1953, Mother Teresa and her group moved
into their new residence. In tribute to their founder, the sisters called it
Motherhouse.

NOTES


  1. Eileen Egan, Such a Vision of the Street: Mother Teresa—The Spirit and the
    Work(Garden City, N.Y.: Image Books, 1986), p. 43.

  2. Egan, Vision,p. 43.

  3. Raghu Rai and Navin Chawla, Faith and Compassion: The Life and Work of
    Mother Teresa,(Rockport, Mass.: Element, 1999), p. 39.

  4. Rai and Chawla, Faith,p. 38.

  5. Kathryn Spink, Mother Teresa: A Complete Authorized Biography(San
    Francisco: Harper & Row, 1997), p. 38.

  6. Rai and Chawla, Faith,p. 40.

  7. Rai and Chawla, Faith,p. 40.

  8. Egan, Vision,p. 48.

  9. Rai and Chawla, Faith,p. 42.

  10. Edward Le Joly, Mother Teresa of Calcutta: A Biography(San Francisco:
    Harper & Row, 1977), p. 28.

  11. Mother Teresa with Jose Luis Gonzàles-Balado, Mother Teresa: In My Own
    Words(New York: Gramercy Books, 1996), pp. 24, 30.

  12. Spink, Mother Teresa,p. 43.

  13. Le Joly, Mother Teresa,p. 30.


OUT OF A CESSPOOL—HOPE 51
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