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.
Biography
Dorothy
Day was born in Brooklyn
, New York
, and raised
in San
Francisco
and Chicago
. She
was born into a family described by one biographer as "solid,
patriotic, and middle class". Her father was a Southerner of
Scotch-Irish background, while
her mother, a native of upstate New York, was of
English ancestry.
Her parents were
married in an Episcopal church located in
Greenwich
Village
, a neighborhood where Day would spend much of her
young adulthood.
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
. Day was a reluctant scholar. Her reading
was chiefly in a radical social direction. 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. Settling on the lower east
side, she worked on the staffs of Socialist publications (
The Liberator,
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.
Initially Day lived a
bohemian life, with
two
common-law marriages and an
abortion, which she later described in her
semi-autobiographical novel,
The Eleventh Virgin (1924)—a
book she later regretted writing.
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
. 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. Subsequently, Day
began writing for Catholic publications, such as
Commonweal 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. 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.
She lived for a time at the now demolished
Spanish Camp community in the Annadale
section of Staten Island. 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
. She
was also a member of the
Industrial Workers of the
World ('Wobblies').
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, a description of
which Day approved. 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; 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".
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
.
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.
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,
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, and in 2001, she was inducted into the
National Women's Hall of
Fame in
Seneca Falls, New
York.
Memorialization
Day's accomplishments have been memorialized in many ways.
A
dormitory at Loyola College in Maryland
is named in her honor. A dormitory at
Lewis University in Romeoville,
Illinois, will soon be named after her.
A named professorship
at St. John's University
School of Law is currently held by labor law scholar David L. Gregory. At
Marquette University, a floor bearing Day's name has been reserved
for those drawn to social justice issues. Broadway Housing
Communities, a supportive housing project in New York City, opened
the Dorothy Day Apartment Building in 2003. Several Catholic Worker
communities are named after Day.
See also
Further reading and biography
- Dorothy Day (1924) The Eleventh Virgin
(semi-autobiographical novel)
- Dorothy Day (1940) Union Square to Rome
- Dorothy Day (1948) Pilgrimage (Diaries) Reprinted 1999.
- Dorothy Day (1952) The Long
Loneliness: The Autobiography of Dorothy Day
(autobiography)
- Dorothy Day (1979) A Life of Therese of Lisieux
- Dorothy Day (1997) and Fishes
- Dorothy Day, ed. Phyllis Zagano (2002) Day: In My Own Words
- Dorothy Day, ed. Robert Ellsberg (2005) Day, Selected Writings
- Dorothy Day, ed. Robert Ellsberg, (2008) Duty of Delight: The Diaries of Dorothy
Day
- William Miller (1982) Dorothy Day: A Biography
- Nancy Roberts (1984) Dorothy Day and the Catholic
Worker (scholarly work)
- Robert Coles (1987) Day: A Radical Devotion (biography)
- Jim Forest (1994) Love Is the Measure: A Biography of
Dorothy Day
- Brigid O'Shea Merriman (1997) for Christ: The Spirituality of Dorothy
Day
- William Thorn, Runkel, Mountin, ed.(2001) Dorothy Day and
the Catholic Worker Movement: Centenary Essays
- Rosalie G. Riegel (2003) Dorothy Day: Portraits by Those
Who Knew Her. Orbis Books ISBN 1-57075-467-5
- Michael Ray Rhodes (director), "Entertaining Angels: The
Dorothy Day Story" (1996 movie)
- Sarah Melici, for Christ, (play, premiered 1998)
- Claudia Larson, Dorothy Day:
Don't Call Me a Saint film documentary 2006.
External links
Notes
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.