Mother Teresa fits that decription.
Mother Teresa of Calcutta.
Mother Teresa lived much of her life in Calcutta, India. She founded the Missionaries of Charity, a group of Catholic sisters who who run hospices, schools, and other services for the sick and the "poorest of the poor." She was beatified in 2003 by the Catholic Church, although a second miracle has to be credited to her in the future before she will be recognized as a saint.
Mother Teresa won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 for her humanitarian work in Calcutta, India.
Mother Teresa, born Agnes Gonxhe Bojaxhiu, (August 26, 1910 - September 5, 1997) was a nun who became well known for her humanitarian and spiritual work in Calcutta.
Mother Teresa of Calcutta is probably one of the more famous ones, but you could really say that about almost any Catholic Sister.
Mother Teresa - particularly known for her "one on one" caring for the dying outcasts in Calcutta - her compassion inspired hundreds of women to join her, thus creating a new order of Nuns in the Catholic church - she was given the Nobel Prize - which she immediately re-invested in her work -
Mother Teresa was a Christian nun who helped the poor of the whole world including Calcutta.
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Yes
Mother Teresa, the Albanian-born Catholic nun who worked in Calcutta, India, died on September 5, 1997, in Calcutta, West Bengal, India at the age of 87.
She decided to join the Sisters of Loreto in 1928 and took her first vows on May 24, 1931.
No president's daughter was a nun so far as I can find out. Margaret Wilson became interested in Asian religions, went to India and lived in an isolated religious community. After her husband died, Eliza Monroe went to Paris and became a Catholic, She may have lived with nuns in her old age but I do not think she actually took vows.