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Rice, Clara - Mary Bird of Persia -9.x
Submitted by LarryG on Mon, 10/11/2010 - 19:22
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397KB Buy the Paperback copy from Amazon:Mary Bird in Persia
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This interesting little missionary biography sheds some details of the ministry of Mary Bird (1859-1914). Her energy and zeal were contagious as she ministered for the Lord in Julfa and Isfahan (Iran) as well as spoke about mission ministries in England and Canada. I wish to thank the Cambridge Project for making this text available and granting permission to use the text.
LarryG
About the Author:
Bird, Mary Rebecca Stewart (1859-1914), missionary in Persia (Iran). Bird was born at Castle Eden, County Durham, England, the daughter of the town's Anglican minister. Educated at home, she was inspired at age five by stories of Africa told by a missionary friend of her father. Thoroughly committed to her call to the mission field, she refused an offer of marriage in preference to working in a foreign land. In 1891 she was accepted by the Church Missionary Society to go to Persia as a pioneer of women's work. She prepared by attending The Willows, a training college for women workers in Stoke Newington, England, for a few months.
Bird lived and worked in Julfa and Isfahan from 1891 to 1897. Because she had some medical training, she opened a small dispensary at Isfahan. On furlough in 1897 and 1898, she spoke of her work to various groups in England and Canada and inspired many. Returning to Persia in 1899, she spent five years in Yezd and Kirman. Her younger sister's marriage necessitated her return to England in 1904 to care for their mother. During the next eight years, in Liverpool, she was an effective advocate of missions. After her mother's death in 1911, she returned to Persia, were she continued her work until her death from typhoid fever.
Other Text Source Links: Internet Archive | Mary Bird in Persia