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Ileana of Romania

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Life
Ileana was born in Bucharest, Romania on [[January 5]], 1909 as Her Royal Highness Ileana, Princess of Romania, Princess of Hohenzollern. Before her marriage, Ileana was the organizer and chief of the Romanian Girl Guide Movement. She also was the organizer of the Girl Reserves of the Red Cross and of the first school of Social Work in Romania. She was an avid sailor. Princess Ileana earned her navigator's papers and owned and sailed the yacht "Isprava" for many years.
On [[July 26]], 1931, Ileana was married to Archduke Anton of Austria and Prince of Tuscany, a marriage encouraged by Ileana's brother, King Carol II, who was jealous of her popularity, and wanted her out of Romania. <ref>Pakula, Hannah (1985). ''The last romantic : a biography of Queen Marie of Roumania''. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0297785982 </ref>. Living in Austria, as World War II began, Ileana began established a hospital at their castle, Sonneburg, for wounded Romanian soldiers after her husband was drafted into the German Luftwaffe.
In 1940, she and her children moved back to Romania where she began another hospital called the Hospital of Queen's Heart in honor of her mother Queen Maria of Romania. Included among those at the hospital, Princess Ileana sheltered and treated wounded aviators shot down during their raids on Romanian oilfields. There, she was joined by Archduke Anton who was placed under house arrest by the Red Army after Romania was occupied by the Soviet Union. However, after King Michael I of Romania abdicated on [[December 30]], 1947, Ileana and her family were exiled from Communist Romania.
In 1960, her marriage to Stefan Issarescu ended in divorce. In 1967, after her children had grown, Princess Ileana entered the Orthodox Monastery of the Protection of the Mother of God, in Bussy, France. Later in 1967, Sister Ileana was [[tonsure]]d a [[nun]] and given the name Mother Alexandra. She moved back to the United States and founded the Orthodox Monastery of the Transfiguration in Ellwood City, Pennsylvania. She served as [[abbess]] from 1969 until her retirement in 1981. She remained at the [[monastery]] until her death on [[January 21]], 1991.
In addition to a volume of memoirs, Mother Alexandra wrote a number of articles and books on spiritual and religious subjects, including "Meditations on the Nicene Creed", [http://www.archangelsbooks.com/articles/spirituality/IntroJesusPrayer.asp "Introduction to the Jesus Prayer"], "The Holy Angels", and "[http://www.tkinter.smig.net/PrincessIleana/OurFather/index.htm Our Father]".
==Reference==
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