What Started the Catholic Worker Movement during the Great Depression
Introduction
In September 2015 Pope Francis came to the United States and delivered a speech during a joint meeting of Congress. During this speech, the Pope specifically commended the lives of four Americans: Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Merton, Martin Luther King Jr., and Dorothy Day. Of the four, Dorothy Day’s life and contributions are probably the least known in non-Catholic circles. However, this is not due to their lack of greatness.[1] In this short essay, I will consider the contributions of Dorothy Day as a progressive American and social activist, specifically her creation of movement that began in Brooklyn and swept across the United States during the early 20th century: the Catholic Worker Movement. In doing so, it will become clear as to why the Pope commended her in his 2015 visit to the United States and why she is being considered for canonization in the Catholic Church. This will also illuminate the relationship between Catholic Social Teaching and American social justice movements in the 20th century.
What is the Catholic Worker?
The Catholic Worker movement began as a lay community dedicated to serving the poor during the Great Depression and advocating on behalf of those oppressed by social injustice. The lay dimension of these Catholic Worker Houses is particularly important. Members do not take vows; they are not ordained in the Catholic Church. They are single or married men and women who are committed to living in community and following in the footsteps of Christ through service to the oppressed. These volunteers serve food to the poor, eat with them, and are dedicated to living an austere lifestyle in solidarity with them. The first Catholic Worker house was founded in Brooklyn in 1933, but now has over 240 communities worldwide, some of which would be described as interfaith. Each community lives out the call to service in different ways, depending on the needs of the communities in which they live. The idea of the Catholic Worker was first presented to Dorothy Day by Peter Maurin and Day’s skill for organizing and passion for social justice got it off the ground running.
Day’s Youth and Socialist Commitments
The Great Depression
The creation of the Catholic Worker cannot be separated from the economic and cultural climate from which it was born. Day was living amidst a particularly trying time in American life: the Great Depression. During the Great Depression one could not walk outside without being bombarded by the poverty lining American streets. Families were cast out of their homes, desperate for work, and depended on the charity of others for their meals. As Day read through the Gospels, she found Jesus’ commitment to the poor particularly compelling and an inescapable duty of Christian life. She not only wanted to serve the poor, but live among them just as Jesus did. She felt that depth in relation with Christ necessarily moves one towards the other. During the Depression Day especially felt the need for such a movement towards the other, opportunities were increasingly abundant. So, restless, eager for political change, and new to the Catholic faith, Day prayed for a way to enact the change she wanted to see in the world.
Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin
Significance of the Catholic Worker
The Catholic Worker stands as one of the most successful and interesting social movements of 20th century America--successful, not in terms of the sheer number of communities that it produced, but in the authentic service it offered to the poor and oppressed. Those in Catholic Worker communities lived a reading of the Gospel that was necessarily active, politically speaking. Having a relationship with Christ was not simply an individualistic endeavor, but one that demanded movement towards the other. Both Day and Maurin understood that love of God, if authentic, should overflow into the lives of others. The Catholic worker was most fundamentally about love. For Day, love was found in community with others--it was how one encountered God. Day articulates this in the very postscript of her memoir, The Long Loneliness, “We have all known the long loneliness and we have learned that the only solution is love and that love comes with community.”[3] So then, the Catholic worker was about bringing love to those who did not know it, who were cast aside by society, shamed by their communities, and ridiculed by the culture. To Day and Maurin, this is what it meant to live like Christ. The true Christian did not simply take up this task as a once a year service opportunity, they lived it daily. Moreover, the Catholic Worker stands as a testament to the synthesis between political progressivism and Christian ethics. Christianity, Catholicism in particular, should engage with politics; it should always promote a preferential option for the poor. Finally, the Catholic Worker foreshadowed the theological posture of Vatican II; it encouraged love of God to be active in the world and confirmed the laity's call to holiness.
References
- Jump up ↑ See the Pope’s speech in full here: https://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/speeches/2015/september/documents/papa-francesco_20150924_usa-us-congress.html
- Jump up ↑ EILEEN, EGAN. "THE FINAL WORD IS LOVE: Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker Movement." Crosscurrents no. 4 (1980): 377-384
- Jump up ↑ Day, Dorothy.The Long Loneliness(New York: Harper One, 1952).