Both of these women are a helpful kind to our world. They both have similarities and differences.
One similarity is that both of their dad's died during their childhood. Another one is that they both were
very close with their mother's. They also were two good women that helped around their envoriment.
Some differences, was that they both were doing two different things in their working life. Judge
Sotomayor is a judge. Sadly, Mother Teresa died, so she was a nun that helped the poor and sickness that
needed help.
People still worship Mother Teresa, because everything she did before her death. She was born in
1910 and died in September 1997. They named a church after her, which is called, " Saint Teresa of
Calcutta by the Roman Catholic Church." In 1946,
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Mother Teresa was riding a train and she said she heard Jesus Christ Calling out to her telling her to work in the slums of Calcutta with the city's poorest and sickest people. After she got permission from her convent, she entered the slums for the first time. During the 50's and 60's she established a leper colony to care for people that had leprosy, which is a long term infectious disease. Mother Teresa also opened a orphanage, nursing home and many medical centers. Finally in 1979, Mother Teresa success was that she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her work with the world's poor and suffering. She died September 5, 1997, at the age of 87. Sonia Sotomayor was born in NYC, on June 25th, 1954. She is from Puerto Rico. The age of 8 she needed a shot for diabetes. Because her father died when she was younger, she had to help the family and work two jobs to help her mother out. When she was younger she watched court trials, and she wanted to become a Judge, which she did succeed that. She became a judge in 1992. In 2002, she was announced to be the first Latina Judge in the whole United States. Sonia Sotomayor graduated high school with number one highest grades, with a scholarship to Princeton College in 1972. Sonia entered Yale Law School, and received her law degree in 1979 and pass the test by becoming a lawyer in 1980.
1984, she started working for a law firm. She also volunteered to help people
in Puerto Rico that were in trouble. Her great work was noticed by one of our presidents, George H.W
Bush. George Bush chose her to be a judge in 1992. Five years later, President Bill Clinton moved her to
a high rank Judge which was a even more important court to the United States. Sotomayor started
teaching Law in 1997. June 2015, Sotomayor voted with the majority in two important Supreme Court
cases. Sotomayor married another lawyer, Kevin Noonan, in 1997. They were divorced in 1984. She has
good connection with her mother and her mother is 90 years and lives in Florida. To this day, Judge
Sotomayor is alive!
In conclusion, Mother Teresa and Judge Sotomayor both have good similarities and differences.
To this day Judge Sotomayor is doing good work and is a great judge to our nation. Mother Teresa is dead
to this day, but people around the world still celebrate her hard work and how good she was with our sick
people and homeless. Both women had a great Success in life and did not stop working until everything
was
perfect.
In both books they share some traits, even though they may not look anything alike they are. both of these novels are dystopian novels and many characters share similarity’s.
They ended up married to each other on May 14, 1815.For the next four years they lived in vicinity and soon became a merchant in Natchez, In 1816, when Jane was 18, she gave birth to her first child Ann on November 26. Later she had another daughter, Rebecca, on June 16, 1819. Twelve days after Rebecca was born, Jane wanted to join her husband in Nacogdoches, so she left with her two children and slave, Kian. She left them at the Calvit’s.
Overall, Laura Locoul Gore can be considered an extraordinary woman. She ran a plantation, rejected society’s certain way of thinking, rejected racism, and wrote down her memoirs to tell the true story about Laura Plantation. Without her detailed account of the history of Laura Plantation, no one would know the true story behind the plantation or the events that happened there. Although she may dead, her legacy lives on through the plantation (that is still visited today) and the memoirs she left behind (which is now a published book). Laura Locoul Gore was truly an extraordinary woman.
today as a great journalist and activist. Her organizations that she formed long ago such
The Supreme Court has the highest authority in this country and throughout its existence the diversity of people in it had been lacking. On May 29, 2009 a new Supreme Court Justice was nominated, she was the first Latina to be appointed to this position and eventually was confirmed by the senate. Sonia Sotomayor’s nomination speech was a moment that brought joy to many Latinos who often did not feel represented in higher positions of authority in this country. She was the first to break the norm for this and in the speech she delivered to the country via new stations she was able to present to the country what qualified her as a Supreme Court Justice. Former President Barack Obama presented Sotomayor as a person
If Dorothy Day is ever canonized, the record of who she was, what she was like and what she did is too complete and accessible for her to be hidden. She will be the patron saint not only of the homeless and those who try to care for them but also of people who lose their temper. One of the miracles of Dorothy's life is that she remained part of a conflict-torn community for nearly a half a century. Still more remarkable, she remained a person of hope and gratitude to the end. Many voices are in support of the canonization process as well, citing Dorothy Day's life as an example that has inspired them to prayer and action for social justice. Her faithfulness to the Gospel, living the "preferential option for the poor" and showing that a lay person can achieve heroic virtue are oft...
paved the way for religious freedom. She was a great leader in the cause for
for attorneys, this case was a significant change in the United States judicial system, and
Her plan was a success and she was able to start her own women’s nursing corps. Because of their efforts and determination, those two women were acknowledged for helping allowing women to become nurses
Through out her life, Eleanor Roosevelt had served the world. She helped so many people by doing simple work with Human Rights. She put her heart and soul into her work and gave the world, especially the United States, a new respect for both women and African Americans. From her years as a United Nations delegate, she gave over one hundred lectures a year, wrote daily newspaper columns, contributed to magazines and wrote three autobiographies. She hosted a weekly television interview show and broadcast a daily radio commentary. She was the most influential First Ladies to date, and continued her well doing for years until her death.
To begin, Mother Teresa stands as a strong activist from India, who deserves recognition for her tremendous actions. Mother Teresa, founder of a religious group of nuns in Calcutta, India, devoted her life to aiding sick and poor people throughout the world. I see Mother Teresa as an important figure to depict, since she dedicated her life to helping other and even inspired others to do the same. Born in war-torn Albania, Mother Teresa survived her childhood and at 19 joined the Sisters of Loreto in India. She served with missionary order of nuns for 20 years, until she had a realization of her life’s mission. She found that she needed to help the poor and sick. So, Mother Teresa descended into the slums of Calcutta and began the Sisters of Charity. From there, she led the Sisters of Charity in ministering to the sick and hungry by giving them much needed food and live. Mother Teresa received local reconviction; but in 1969, after a documentary on her work, she became a celebrity and was deemed a modern day saint. Mother Teresa used this to increase awareness of her work, thus benefiting the poor and sick further. She gave speeches all over the world emphasizing the struggle of the poor. Before her death, Mother Teresa had met a large number of world l...
Ruth Ginsburg was born March 15, 1933, in Brooklyn, New York. Ginsburg’s grew up in a low-income home. She was taught the importance of education and independence. Some of Ruth’s earliest memories are of going to the public library with her mother, trips that imbued her with a desire to read and a love of learning. Although her mother did not go to college she still did everything could to influence Ruth in the right direction. Her mother, Cecelia, instead of going to college worked in a garment factory to help for the education of her sons. Growing up Ruth admired the selflessness of her mother.
...gth in self and faith to stand up with the power of God knowing already that she was going to die. Burning at the stake for what she believed fueled her country and now her heroism lives on in art and writings.
This means that although she was discouraged by many people, Ginsburg didn't let that stop her from becoming an attorney who argued cases for people with the same experiences as her. She helped many people by taking hers and other people's experiences and turning it into something great that would affect many women, and men. The challenges Ginsburg faced impacted her greatly, from discrimination to injustice, these contributed to her success in her dream. Sonia Sotomayor faced many hardships along the way in her dream of becoming a lawyer. Some of these include diseases, hardship, and
Throughout the 20th century, certain individuals have left a profound impact on the lives of countless people. One such person was Mother Teresa. Mother Teresa, born Agnes Bojaxhiu had many different influences that led to her establishing the missionaries of charity which directed her into becoming the speaker for the poor around the world. Because of the aforementioned facts and many others, Mother Teresa stands as one of the greatest humanitarians of the 20th century because of her unwavering commitment to aiding those in need, which makes her an ideal example of a hero according to the quote by Robert F. Kennedy “Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope.