Miss Margaret Elizabeth Noble who  later became Bhagini Nivedita was born on Oct 28, 1867.
 Margaret was the eldest with a  sister May and brother Richmond. Her father Samuel Noble used to take  Margaret for service. He had set an example of perfect self-abnegation and he  strictly lived his religion which gave moral value to everything he did. A  missionary returned from India when came to visit Samuel saw Margaret and  said : 'India seeks diligently for her God!  India will summon you, perhaps, as it  has summoned me. Be ready always.' At that time itself she had looked for  India on the map. Just at the age of  34 years her father passed away whispering Margaret's name to her mother, had  said: 'When God calls her, let her go. She will spread her wings…She will do  great things.'
 Margaret had her schooling at  Halifax where  she developed taste for literature due to inspiration from her Principal. She  had many questions in mind. 'Can death really destroy life? What happens to the  life element during death if nothing is ever destroyed in the successive  transformations?' She used to ask her Principal :'I believe in God, but I want  to understand. How did the first thing began?' She opened the Bible and read  passionately but she was not satisfied. She took book of science and with logic  tried to understand it. But it was difficult at that time. 
 She was maturing quickly. Her  expansiveness gave way to reflection. She had come to realize that religion was  a vaster science even than chemistry and physics and that one had to find within  oneself, by personal experience, the answer to all spiritual  problems.
 To help her mother, Margaret took  up first job as a teacher at the age of 18 years. For her spiritual urge, she  joined High  Church in Keswick where she  used to worship with all sincerity. With her worship of the altar cross, with  the flowers, the incense, the candles, she associated the whole of Nature. In  the rituals she chanted litanies, she beheld the saints and martyrs and with all  that she used to find her soul filled with a deep religious longing. Margaret  was learning that the more the soul develops and the more beauty it absorbs, the  more insatiable it becomes for the infinite.  
 In 1887, she had been to an  orphanage at Rugby to learn from the experiment  that of poverty as to how strong were her powers of renunciation and  self-sacrifice. And, after an year she felt it was a fulfilling experience which  opened a wider field to her. In another experiment at Wrexham, a large mining  centre, where she was appointed as mistress in a secondary school, she got  experience in 'welfare work' and found that a spacious field of action was  awaiting her. To express her feelings, she started writing in newspapers. Later  she helped to start a school at Wimbledon where  she did her experiments on new education. 
 …………….contd…
  
--  With Regards and Prayers (D. Bhanudas) 9443150490 Visit: www.vkendra.org See : http://dbhanudas.wordpress.com      See :The Dedicated  
 
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