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Dorothy Day

 
Who2 Biography: Dorothy Day, Activist / Journalist

  • Born: 8 November 1897
  • Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York
  • Died: 29 November 1980
  • Best Known As: Laywoman who co-founded The Catholic Worker

Dorothy Day was co-founder of a community of activists who published a newspaper while feeding, sheltering and living with the poor of New York City. The group and its paper, both called The Catholic Worker, set forth a radical Christian vision of a world made more humane through active love, sacrifice, personal freedom, pacifism and resistance of what they saw as the dehumanizing features of capitalism and nationalism. Day, from a nominally Protestant Christian family, had a recurring interest in things spiritual throughout her Bohemian young years as a journalist and activist for workers' and women's rights. She converted to Catholicism as a 30-year-old unwed mother. In 1933 she and an eccentric French thinker and vagabond, Peter Maurin, formed the Worker. In 2000 the Vatican agreed to the long protocol of considering her for sainthood. Some followers have objected, fearing that Day's message, often at odds with mainstream Catholic and American culture, will be toned down in the process.

Her daughter, Tamar (1926-2008), was born of what Day describes as her "common-law marriage" to Forster Batterham. Their relationship, loving and committed but marked by a disagreement over religion, ended when she had Tamar baptized... The Worker movement caught on fast and continues today. The newspaper's circulation grew to 150,000 by 1936 but declined during World War II because of its pacifist stance. Catholic Worker houses of hospitality still exist in America and abroad... Her 1952 autobiography is The Long Loneliness (Harper and Row).

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(born Nov. 8, 1897, New York, N.Y., U.S. — died Nov. 29, 1980, New York City) U.S. journalist and social reformer. While a scholarship student at the University of Illinois (1914 – 16), she read widely among socialist authors and soon joined the Socialist Party. In 1916 she returned to New York to work for the radical journals The Call and The Masses. With the birth of her daughter (1927), she broke her ties with radicalism and converted to Roman Catholicism. After writing for the liberal Catholic journal Commonweal, in 1933 she and Peter Maurin (1877 – 1949) cofounded The Catholic Worker, which expressed her view of "personalism." She sought to aid the poor by establishing urban "hospitality houses" as part of the Catholic Worker movement. After Maurin's death, she continued to publish the paper and manage the hospitality houses. Although her outspoken pacifist views were criticized by Catholic conservatives, she influenced Catholic liberals such as Thomas Merton and Daniel and Philip Berrigan.

For more information on Dorothy Day, visit Britannica.com.

Biography: Dorothy Day
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Dorothy Day (1897-1980) was a founder of the Catholic Worker Movement which joined radical social reform with the Roman Catholic faith in a movement for social justice and peace.

Dorothy Day was born on November 8, 1897, in Brooklyn, New York, the daughter of John J. and Grace (Satterlee) Day. Her father was a newspaper sports writer whose search for a steady job caused the family to travel widely during her pre-adolescent years. She spent part of her youth (1904-1906) in California where her father worked until the San Francisco earthquake compelled him to find another job. In 1906 the family moved to Chicago where the elder Day was employed by a local newspaper. She felt extremely isolated from family and friends during those pre-adolescent years, which she remembered in one of her many books as The Long Loneliness (1952).

Even as a youngster Day developed a taste for literature and writing and did much of both. She also had several religious experiences which would affect her later in life. In 1914 she finally escaped from her restrictive family milieu by matriculating as a student at the University of Illinois in Urbana. There she promptly fell in with a small crowd of radical students, many of whom were Jewish-Americans discriminated against by the general university community. Her closest friend at the university, a wealthy young Jewish woman from Chicago who shared Day's literary and political tastes, radicalized Dorothy politically (the friend later become a prominent Communist). Even before she left the university after only two years, during which academic studies grew sterile and failed to stimulate her, Day had become a part of the pre-World War I American youth rebellion against the conventions of their parents. She and her radical friends wanted to create a new and freer society - in the language of the day, "to transvalue all values."

Bored by academic life, excited by new social, cultural, and political ideas, it was natural for Day to seek to develop herself in what was then (1916) the center of an American bohemian culture. She moved to New York where she immediately joined in the lively life of the Greenwich Village and Lower East Side rebels and radicals. Day almost immediately found a job as a feature writer on the New York Call, the nation's largest and most influential socialist daily. Soon she was involved fulltime in the city's radical political and cultural scene, meeting and becoming close to many of the era's most famous personalities. In the winter of 1917-1918 she became a close friend of the playwright Eugene O'Neill, whom she saw through many bouts with alcohol. Day also developed friendships with Floyd Dell and Max Eastman, who made her an assistant editor of their new magazine, Masses - one of the most famous radical cultural publications in American history.

But American participation in World War I led to government suppression of left-wing organizations and publications and left Day and her radical friends adrift. Troubled by her aimless life among Greenwich Village bohemians, in 1918 she took a position as a probationary nurse at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn. Nursing, however, failed to satisfy Day's search for meaning in life, although it did involve her in her first serious and tumultuous love affair. In 1919 she left the hospital to work for a time as a writer on the successor journal to Masses, The Liberator. This, too, brought her little satisfaction, and in 1920, for reasons still unclear, she married Barkeley Tobey, an oft-wed literary promoter. Only a year later Day dissolved this, her only formal marriage.

For the next several years she seemed to drift aimlessly, working as a reporter for the New Orleans Item in 1922-1923 and also as an occasional writer for the Catholic journal Commonweal. While in New Orleans she wrote and published a partly autobiographical novel, The Eleventh Virgin (1924). With the money from her novel, Day moved back to the New York area, buying a beach cottage on Staten Island. She resumed contact with the city's intellectuals and wrote occasional pieces for The New Masses. In 1925 she began living with a biologist and anarchist (one Foster Batterham), with whom she had a daughter, Tamar Teresa, born on March 3, 1927. After the daughter's birth Batterham left and Day began to immerse herself in religious literature and theology. Unknown to many of her old and close friends, Day on December 28, 1927, had herself and her daughter baptized in a small Staten Island Roman Catholic Church. For the remainder of her life she would remain a dedicated daughter of the Church. She had made a strange personal journey from a diluted childhood Protestantism through years as a rebellious bohemian, ultimately to find solace in the Catholic faith, a journey which she described poignantly in one of her autobiographical fragments, From Union Square to Rome (1938).

At first, however, even her new religious faith brought Day no clear purpose in life. In 1929 she toyed with script-writing in Hollywood but without satisfaction. A year later she moved with her small daughter to Mexico City, where they lived on the edge of poverty. That same summer she returned to the United States where the onset of the Great Depression swept her back into the movement for social reform. In December 1932 she went to Washington to report on a Communist-led hunger march. On her return to New York City she met Peter Maurin, a former French peasant and social agitator, who convinced her that radical social reform and the Roman Catholic faith could be united. Day now found a purpose in life that would remain with her for the remainder of her days. Together with Maurin she founded a movement which would carry Jesus's original message to the most dispossessed of workers. They would prove that Catholicism served the poor as well as the rich, the weak better than the mighty. Through their newspaper, Catholic Worker, and hospitality houses which they established as havens for homeless workers, Day and Maurin promoted their singular version of Catholicism as a social reform movement.

For the next 50 years Day and the Catholic Worker Movement were at the forefront of all Catholic reform efforts. Young American Roman Catholics, eager to improve secular society while remaining faithful to their church, flocked to hear Day's message. The Berrigan brothers (Daniel and Philip), Michael Harrington, and many others fell under her spell, which turned them into radical social reformers. Other Catholics influenced by Day served as activists in the industrial union movement led by the Congress of Industrial Organizations, in the civil rights movement beginning in the 1950s, and increasingly in the peace movement which assumed growing importance in the nuclear age. Echoes of Day's approach to religion and reform could also be found in the "liberation theology" movement which emerged in Latin America in the 1960s.

By the time she died on November 29, 1980, Day had had an enormous impact on both American Catholicism and reform. It was an impact which lived on as revealed in the pastoral letters issued by the American Roman Catholic bishops in 1983 and 1984 on the issues of nuclear weapons and the economy.

Further Reading

William D. Miller, Dorothy Day, a Biography (1982) is a full and excellent account of the subject's life and career. Two equally excellent books describe and analyze the history of the Catholic Worker Movement: William D. Miller, A Harsh and Dreadful Love: Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker Movement (1972) and Mel Piehl, Breaking Bread: The Catholic Worker and the Origin of Catholic Radicalism in America (1982). Several of Day's own books, aside from the ones cited in the article, might also be profitably consulted, especially House of Hospitality (1939) and On Pilgrimage: The Sixties (1973).

US History Companion: Day, Dorothy
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(1897-1980), Catholic journalist, peace activist. As founder of the Catholic Worker movement, Dorothy Day joined a conservative religious piety with radical political convictions. Although her pacifism provoked criticism, in later years she was widely admired as a heroic, even holy woman, uncompromisingly committed to social justice and the cause of the poor. She left a deep impact on the American Catholic church.

Having grown up in a newspaper family in Chicago, Day was attracted to journalism and the progressive cause at an early age. She left college in 1916 to work for a number of socialist and left-wing journals in New York City. She was active in antiwar circles during the First World War and was jailed for demonstrating on behalf of women's suffrage. After the war she passed some restless years as part of New York's literary and political avant-garde.

A turning point in her life came in 1927 with the birth of a daughter, an experience so filled with joy and mystery that it prompted her conversion to the Roman Catholic church. The conversion itself, as she later described it in her autobiography, The Long Loneliness, was a painful process, involving not only separation from the child's father but alienation from many of her radical friends, for whom the Catholic church represented a bastion of conservatism. She herself was left wondering how to reconcile her political commitment with her religious faith.

The solution came in 1932 when she met Peter Maurin (1877-1949), a self-educated French philosopher of peasant background. He inspired her to establish a Catholic newspaper addressed to workers. The result was the Catholic Worker, launched in May 1933 in the heart of the depression. From the start the paper reflected a radical, anticapitalist perspective rooted in the Bible, Catholic social teaching, and a personalist, communitarian philosophy. Around the newspaper a community emerged combining the "works of mercy"--feeding the hungry and sheltering the homeless in "houses of hospitality"--with direct action on behalf of peace, labor, civil rights, and other causes. Catholic Worker communities proliferated around the country, united by a similar faith expressed in voluntary poverty, the works of mercy, action for peace and justice, and solidarity with the poor. According to Day, "The mystery of the poor is that they are Jesus, and what we do for them we do for him."

Day's pacifism was her most controversial position, but perhaps also her most enduring contribution. It influenced such figures as Thomas Merton, Daniel Berrigan, and successive generations of Catholic peace activists. In the 1950s and 1960s she was frequently jailed for acts of civil disobedience. For this she was often criticized, even by those who admired her service to the poor. After her death in 1980, however, she was widely credited with having restored the ideal of gospel nonviolence to a place of honor within the Catholic church.

Bibliography:

Robert Ellsberg, ed., By Little and By Little: The Selected Writings of Dorothy Day (1983); Jim Forest, Love Is the Measure: A Biography of Dorothy Day (1986).

Author:

Robert Ellsberg

See also Conscientious Objection; Radicalism; Religion; Roman Catholic Church.


Quotes By: Dorothy Day
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Quotes:

"The best thing to do with the best things in life is to give them up."

"Tradition! We scarcely know the word anymore. We are afraid to be either proud of our ancestors or ashamed of them. We scorn nobility in name and in fact. We cling to a bourgeois mediocrity which would make it appear we are all Americans, made in the image and likeness of George Washington."

Wikipedia: Dorothy Day
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Dorothy Day
Born November 8, 1896(1896-11-08)
Brooklyn, New York
Died November 29, 1980 (aged 83)
Maryhouse, New York City
Resting place Cemetery of the Resurrection, Staten Island
Nationality United States
Education University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Known for co-founder of the Catholic Worker Movement
Title Servant of God
Religious beliefs Roman Catholic
Spouse(s) Berkeley Tobey,[1] Forster Batterham (common-law, father of daughter Tamar)
Children Tamar Hennessy (1926-2008)
Parents John and Grace (nee Satterlee) Day
Relatives Three brothers (Donald, Sam, and John); one sister (Della)
Website
http://www.cjd.org/brochure.html

Social Christianity

Christian cross

Important figures

Francis of Assisi  · Von Ketteler
Pope Leo XIII  · Adolph Kolping
Edward Bellamy  · Margaret Eadie Wedgwood Benn
Phillip Berryman  · James Hal Cone
Dorothy Day  · Toni Negri
Leo Tolstoy  · Oscar Romero
Gustavo Gutiérrez  · Abraham Kuyper
Daniel Berrigan  · Philip Berrigan
Martin Luther King, Jr.  · Walter Rauschenbusch
Desmond Tutu  · Tommy Douglas


Organizations
Confederation of Christian Trade Unions
Catholic Worker Movement
Christian Socialist Movement

Key Concepts
Subsidiarity  · Christian anarchism
Marxism  · Liberation theology
Praxis School  · Precarity
Human dignity  · Social market economy
Communitarianism · Distributism
Catholic social teaching
Neo-Calvinism  · Neo-Thomism


Key Documents
Rerum Novarum (1891)
Princeton Stone Lectures (1898)
Populorum Progressio (1967)
Centesimus Annus (1991)
Caritas in Veritate (2009)


Part of a series of articles on Christianity

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Dorothy Day (November 8, 1897 – November 29, 1980) was an American journalist, social activist, distributist, anarchist, and devout Catholic convert. In the 1930s, Day worked closely with fellow activist Peter Maurin to establish the Catholic Worker movement, a nonviolent, pacifist, movement that continues to combine direct aid for the poor and homeless with nonviolent direct action on their behalf.

A revered figure within the U.S. Catholic community, Day is being considered for sainthood by the Catholic Church.

Contents

Biography

Dorothy Day was born in Brooklyn, New York, and raised in San Francisco and Chicago.[2] She was born into a family described by one biographer as "solid, patriotic, and middle class".[3] Her father was a Southerner of Scotch-Irish background, while her mother, a native of upstate New York, was of English ancestry.[3] Her parents were married in an Episcopal church located in Greenwich Village, a neighborhood where Day would spend much of her young adulthood.[3]

In 1914, Dorothy Day attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on a scholarship, but dropped out after two years and moved to New York City.[4] Day was a reluctant scholar.[4] Her reading was chiefly in a radical social direction.[4] She avoided campus social life and insisted on supporting herself rather than live on money from her father, a characteristic she was to maintain for the rest of her life, to the point of buying all her clothing and shoes from discount stores to save money.[5] Settling on the lower east side, she worked on the staffs of Socialist publications (The Liberator,[6] The Masses, The Call) and engaged in anti-war and women's suffrage protests. She spent several months in Greenwich Village, where she became close to Eugene O'Neill.[7]

Initially Day lived a bohemian life, with two common-law marriages and an abortion,[7] which she later described in her semi-autobiographical novel, The Eleventh Virgin (1924)—a book she later regretted writing.[8] With the birth of her daughter, Tamar (1927–2008), she began a period of spiritual awakening which led her to embrace Catholicism, joining the Church in December 1927, with baptism at Our Lady Help of Christians parish on Staten Island.[9] In her 1952 biography, The Long Loneliness, Day recalled that immediately after her baptism, she made her first confession, and the following day, she received communion.[10] Subsequently, Day began writing for Catholic publications, such as Commonweal[11] and America.

The Catholic Worker movement started with the Catholic Worker newspaper, created to promote Catholic social teaching and stake out a neutral, pacifist position in the war-torn 1930s.[12] This grew into a "house of hospitality" in the slums of New York City and then a series of farms for people to live together communally.[13] She lived for a time at the now demolished Spanish Camp community in the Annadale section of Staten Island.[14] The movement quickly spread to other cities in the United States, and to Canada and the United Kingdom; more than 30 independent but affiliated CW communities had been founded by 1941. Well over 100 communities exist today, including several in Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, The Netherlands, the Republic of Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand, and Sweden.[15] She was also a member of the Industrial Workers of the World ('Wobblies').[16]

By the 1960s, Day was embraced by a significant number of Catholics, while at the same time, she earned the praise of counterculture leaders such as Abbie Hoffman, who characterized her as the first hippie,[5] a description of which Day approved.[5] Yet, although Day had written passionately about women’s rights, free love and birth control in the 1910s, she opposed the sexual revolution of the 1960s, saying she had seen the ill-effects of a similar sexual revolution in the 1920s. Day had a progressive attitude toward social and economic rights, alloyed with a very orthodox and traditional sense of Catholic morality and piety.

Her devotion to her church was neither conventional nor unquestioning, however. She alienated many U.S. Catholics (including some clerical leaders) with her condemnation of Falangist leader Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War;[17] and, possibly in response to her criticism of Francis Cardinal Spellman, she was pressured by the Archdiocese of New York in 1951 to change the name of her newspaper, "ostensibly because the word Catholic implies an official church connection when such was not the case".[18]

In 1971, Day was awarded the Pacem in Terris Award. It was named after a 1963 encyclical letter by Pope John XXIII that calls upon all people of good will to secure peace among all nations. Pacem in Terris is Latin for 'Peace on Earth.' Day was accorded many other honors in her last decade, including the Laetare Medal from the University of Notre Dame, in 1972.

She died on November 29, 1980, in New York City.[19]

Day was buried in Cemetery of the Resurrection on Staten Island, just a few blocks from the location of the beachside cottage where she first became interested in Catholicism. She was proposed for sainthood by the Claretian Missionaries in 1983. Pope John Paul II granted the Archdiocese of New York permission to open Day's "cause" for sainthood in March 2000, thereby officially making her a "Servant of God" in the eyes of the Catholic Church.

Stages of Canonization in the Roman Catholic Church
  Servant of God   →   Venerable   →   Blessed   →   Saint  

Legacy

Her autobiography, The Long Loneliness, was published in 1952. Day's account of the Catholic Worker movement, Loaves and Fishes, was published in 1963. A popular movie called Entertaining Angels: The Dorothy Day Story was produced in 1996. Day was portrayed by Moira Kelly and Peter Maurin was portrayed by Martin Sheen, actors later known for their roles on The West Wing television series in the United States. Fool for Christ: The Story of Dorothy Day,a one woman play performed by Sarah Melici, premiered in 1998. A DVD of the play has been produced and Melici continues to do live performances in the United States and Canada. The first full-length documentary about Day, Dorothy Day: Don't Call Me a Saint, by filmmaker Claudia Larson, premiered on November 29, 2005 at Marquette University, where Day's papers are housed. The documentary was also shown at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival and is now available on DVD. Day's diaries, The Duty of Delight: The Diaries of Dorothy Day, edited by Robert Ellsberg, were published by the Marquette University Press in 2008.

Day has been the recipient of numerous posthumous honors and awards. Among them: in 1992, she received the Courage of Conscience Award from the Peace Abbey,[20] and in 2001, she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, New York.[21]

Memorialization

Day's accomplishments have been memorialized in a variety of ways. A dormitory at Loyola College in Maryland was named in her honor; and a dormitory at Lewis University in Romeoville, Illinois, will soon be named after her. In addition, a named professorship bears the name of Dorothy Day at the School of Law of St. John's University, a Catholic university in Queens, New York; the position is currently occupied by labor law scholar David L. Gregory.[22] [23]

Meanwhile, Broadway Housing Communities, a supportive housing project in New York City, opened the Dorothy Day Apartment Building in 2003. Dorothy Day Apartments supports The Dorothy Day After-School Program and The Dorothy Day Early Childhood Center. Several Catholic Worker communities are also named after Dorothy Day. At Marquette University, a floor bearing Day's name has been reserved for those drawn to social justice issues. In the fall semester, students in the program are expected to take Philosophy of the Human Nature, and in the spring Christian Discipleship. Throughout the year, students are also expected to take part in a service learning site of their choice; choices include the Milwaukee Detention Center, the International learning center, and various other sites in the Milwaukee area.

See also

Further reading and biography

External links



Notes

  1. ^ Peerman, Dean. "Entertaining Angels: The Dorothy Day Story". Christian Century. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1058/is_n7_v114/ai_19191937. Retrieved 2009-02-25. 
  2. ^ Coles (1987), pp. 1–2.
  3. ^ a b c Coles (1987), p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c Coles (1987), p. 2.
  5. ^ a b c The Bulletin: p. 61. November 29, 1980. 
  6. ^ Cornell, Tom. "A Brief Introduction to the Catholic Worker Movement". catholicworker.org. http://www.catholicworker.org/historytext.cfm?Number=4. Retrieved 2009-02-21. 
  7. ^ a b Coles (1987), p. 3.
  8. ^ Coles (1987), p. 6.
  9. ^ Coles (1987), pp. 8–9.
  10. ^ Day (1952/1980) pp. 148–149.
  11. ^ Coles (1987), p. 11.
  12. ^ Coles (1987), pp. 12–15.
  13. ^ Coles (1987), pp. 14–15.
  14. ^ "Dorothy Day Cottages Demolished". preserve.org. http://www.preserve.org/plsi/dday.htm. Retrieved 2009-10-13. 
  15. ^ "List of Catholic Worker Communities". catholicworker.org. http://www.catholicworker.org/communities/commlistall.cfm. Retrieved 2008-11-30. 
  16. ^ "Biography of Dorothy Day". iww.org. http://www.iww.org/en/taxonomy/term/495/all. Retrieved 2008-02-04. 
  17. ^ Coles (1987), pp.79–81.
  18. ^ Coles (1987), p. 81.
  19. ^ "Dorothy Day, Outspoken Catholic Activist, Dies at 83". New York Times. November 30, 1980. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F50A13F63C5512728DDDA90B94D9415B8084F1D3. Retrieved 2009-02-23. "Dorothy Day, a social activist in the United States for more than 50 years, died yesterday at Maryhouse, the Catholic settlement house in Manhattan's Lower East Side where she lived. She was 83 years old." 
  20. ^ "The Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Recipients List". peaceabbey.org. http://www.peaceabbey.org/awards/cocrecipientlist.html. Retrieved 2009-10-13. 
  21. ^ "National Women's Hall of Fame, Women of the Hall, Dorothy Day". greatwomen.org. http://greatwomen.org/women.php?action=viewone&id=184/. Retrieved 2009-01-05. 
  22. ^ "David L. Gregory". stjohns.edu. http://stjohns.edu/academics/graduate/law/faculty/profiles/Gregory. Retrieved 2008-02-25. 
  23. ^ "David L. Gregory Appointed Dorothy Day Professor of Law". stjohns.org. http://www.stjohns.edu/academics/graduate/law/news/Faculty/pr_law_060829.sju. Retrieved 2008-02-25. 

References

  • Coles, Robert (1987). Dorothy Day: A Radical Devotion. Cambridge, MA: De Capo Press. ISBN 9780201079746.
  • Day, Dorothy (1952/1980). The Long Loneliness: The Autobiography of the Lengendary Catholic Social Activist. New York: HarperOne. ISBN 9780060617516.

 
 

 

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Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Dorothy Day biography from Who2.  Read more
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