Publisher Description
The twentieth century was deeply impacted by one of the greatest, most inspiring spiritual leaders of all time: Mother Teresa of Calcutta. For millions of people around the world, Mother Teresa stood as the ultimate example of belief and faith in action. She was living proof that one person, filled with love, purpose, and determination, really can make a difference—can, in fact, touch the entire world. This program, narrated by Dr. Lou Tartaglia and woven together with personal insights from Father Angelo, includes some of the rarest recordings ever presented to the public from Mother Teresa herself. The result is something truly unprecedented: A rare and precious glimpse into Mother Teresa's private thoughts and spiritual insights . . . and a practical blueprint for creating a life of deeply authentic spirituality, according to her example.
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About the Authors
Dr. Louis A. Tartaglia is a board-certified
psychiatrist, addiction medicine specialist, and certified master practitioner
of neurolinguistic programming. Committed to helping others achieve their full
potential, he worked with individuals in his New York and New Jersey practices
for over two decades. He served as a consultant to Mother Teresa on issues of
substance abuse and recovery and helped set up a therapeutic clinic in Rome as
an instructor at the Rutgers Summer School of alcoholism studies and as a clinical
instructor at the Medical College of Ohio. He is the author of several books,
including Flawless and The Great Wing. Dr. Tartaglia now serves
as director of the Tartaglia Mind Technologies Institute, an organization whose
mission is to create new insights for individuals, increase personal and
professional productivity, dramatically enhance self-esteem, and discover life’s
preeminent purpose.
Mother Teresa of Calcutta (1910–1997), born
in Skopje, joined the Sisters of Loreto in Dublin in 1928 and was sent to
India, where she began her novitiate. She taught at St. Mary’s High School in
Calcutta from 1931 to 1948 until leaving the Loreto order to begin the
Missionaries of Charity. Through her sisters, brothers, and priests, her
service of the poorest of the poor spread all around the world. She won many
awards, including the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize. After her death in 1997, the
process for her sainthood quickly began, resulting in her beatification in
2003.