A Brief Introduction to the Catholic
Worker Movement
By
Tom Cornell
The Catholic Worker movement is
made up of people motivated by the teachings
of Jesus, especially as they are summarized
in the Sermon on the Mount, and the
teachings of the Catholic Church, in the
writings of the early Fathers and the social
encyclicals of the modern popes, to bring
about a "new society within the shell of the
old, a society in which it will be easier to
be good." A society in tune with these
teachings would have no place for economic
exploitation or war, for racial, gender or
religious discrimination, but would be
marked by a cooperative social order without
extremes of wealth and poverty and a
nonviolent approach to legitimate defense
and conflict resolution.
The movement publishes a tabloid-size
organ seven times a year, The Catholic
Worker. Started by an itinerant French
worker-scholar (and illegal immigrant) Peter
Maurin and Dorothy Day, a veteran left-wing
journalist and Catholic convert, the paper
was first sold in New York City, at a
Communist Party May Day rally in Union
Square, for a penny a copy, in 1933. The
price remains the same.
Peter Maurin
Peter Maurin saw the need for a new
intellectual synthesis to meet the material
and spiritual crisis epitomized by the great
Depression and lasting to this day, a
synthesis grounded in cult, that is prayer,
in culture, that is literature and the arts,
and agriculture, that is labor and the
crafts. Houses of hospitality in the cities
would make possible direct personal response
to the needs of the wounded members of the
larger community through direct practice of
the corporal and spiritual works of mercy.
Farming communes on the land would encourage
scholars to become workers and workers to
become scholars while obviating unemployment
and forming "cells of good living" as a
practical alternative to a moribund society.
In city houses and farming communes regular
meetings "for the clarification of thought"
would be held. People of all persuasions
would dialogue, to explore the causes for
the present disorder and to find a way from
where we are to where we ought to be.
Peter Maurin was a man of the soil, with
deep roots. His family had worked the same
land, in southern France, the Languedoc, for
fifteen hundred years. His region had been
evangelized by Irenaeus, disciple of
Polycarp, disciple of John. Peter had worked
with Le Sillion, a Catholic lay movement in
France for political and social democracy.
He worked as a laborer and as a teacher
before emigrating to Canada as a prospector.
He entered the US looking for work,
prospered as a private teacher of French,
returned to casual manual labor in order to
study at his own pace a curriculum of his
own design.
Dorothy Day
Dorothy Day was a city woman, a Bohemian
as well as a pioneer in the "engaged
journalism" of the Left. She was born in New
York City, grew up there and in Oakland,
California, and Chicago before returning as
a young adult to New York and a staff
assignment at the daily Socialist Call.
She worked on The Liberator staff and
was acting editor of The Masses when
it was closed by order of Attorney General
Palmer during the Red Scare after World War
I. Dorothy was jailed for picketing
President Wilson's White House for the
women's vote and participated in a hunger
strike at Occoquan Prison. Her friends and
fellow workers were socialists, anarchists
and communists. She was an intimate as well
of the literary circles in New York hat
centered around Eugene O'Neil, Kenneth Burke
and Malcolm Cowley. It was a heady time to
be young and in New York.
And there was love. Dorothy's love, an
Anglo-American named Forster, loved nature
more than human society, introduced Dorothy
to nature's beauty and gave her a daughter.
In thanksgiving, and in hope of shielding
her child from the moral confusion and pain
of a rootless, secularized society, Dorothy
yielded to an insistent and growing pull
from the Transcendent, had he baby baptized
and followed her into the Catholic Church.
A Movement Begins
Peter had an idea. Dorothy had passion
and ability and an unfulfilled desire to
work, as she had with the radicals of the
Left, for social justice, but now as a
Christian and a Catholic. Out of their
meeting in 1932, the Catholic Worker was
born and the paper first offered to the
public five months later. Some early
visitors to the Catholic Worker headquarters
noted its similarity in style and tone to
L'Esprit, the lay Catholic intellectual
journal in Paris at that time, identified
with Emmanuel Mounier, Charles Peguy and
Jacques Maritain. Maritain actively
encouraged the work.
The circulation of the paper quickly
reached 150,000, to plummet drastically
during the Spanish Civil War and World War
II, when the editorial position of the paper
remained consistently Christian pacifist,
and many volunteers and staff members went
to prison or public service camps for
refusing the draft. Post war recovery was
slow but steady, and the movement
distinguished itself for resisting Cold War
hysteria and red-baiting. The movement took
a leading role in stimulating opposition to
the Viet Nam War. Early in its history the
movement had organized to oppose
anti-Semitism and has stood steadily for
racial justice.
Over the years independent Catholic
Worker house of hospitality and farming
communes have sprung up, now numbering over
one hundred, some with their own
publications. In New York hundreds are fed
on a "no questions asked" basis at the soup
kitchen, scores of men, women and volunteers
make their home in two houses in the Bowery
and a farming commune upstate. Regular
Friday Night Meetings for the Clarification
of Thought are held and the paper's
circulation has climbed to 90,000.
Anyone may seek help at the Catholic
Worker. Anyone may volunteer who has the
ability to take personal responsibility and
work respectfully with others. Most of the
volunteers are Catholics committed to active
nonviolence. There is no means test and no
religious test.
Contemporary Issues
The nuclear age has sharpened awareness
of the need for disarmament and alternatives
to war. The widening gap between rich and
poor in our country and between nations has
spurred greater urgency in the quest for a
more just social order. But the
distinguishing marks of the movement remain
smallness, decentralization, personal
responsibility, the personal response to
persons in need in direct encounter and a
search for answers to the questions that
arise from that meeting: Why are there so
many poor and abandoned? What is honest
work? What is due workers and the
unemployed? What is the relationship between
political, social and economic democracy,
and between these and the common good? Just
where are we, where do we want to be and how
can we get there? What of means and end?
What does it mean to follow Jesus Christ
today?
Catholic Workers attempt to alleviate the
sufferings of the poor by adopting lives of
voluntary poverty in order to be free for
direct, personal involvement, not so much
dispensing charity as sharing in the lives
of others. Voluntary poverty also frees us
to respond to militarism, exploitation and
racism in the spirit of Christian
nonviolence, with the weapons of the Spirit,
prayer, penance and self-sacrifice, and the
weapons forged by Gandhi, Martin Luther King
and Cesar Chavez, and by the nonviolent
activists with whom we work in the peace
movement. We do not underestimate the task,
noting that a generation after the passage
of civil rights legislation large sectors of
our minority populations are more depressed
and isolated than ever. This struggle brings
heartbreak, but it is fun, too, joy.
Catholic Worker Legacy
From the Catholic Worker movement have
sprung many off-shoots, among them the
Association of Catholic Trade Unionists, the
Catholic Peace Fellowship and Pax Christi,
USA. Catholic Worker alumni can be found on
the editorial staffs of major publications,
on university faculties, in labor unions and
in monasteries, and occasionally in jails
and prisons for acts of nonviolent civil
disobedience.
It is impossible to estimate the effect
the movement has had on the Church or on
society in an increasingly conservative
environment. By its very existence for over
sixty years the Catholic Worker has had
something of a reproach to both, but its
fidelity to a consistent life ethic, to the
prophetic tradition of Israel, and to the
"gently personalism of traditional
Christianity." Dorothy Day once wrote that
"What we do is very little, but its like the
little boy with a few loaves and fishes.
Christ took that little and increased it. He
will do the rest."
Tom Cornell resides at Peter Maurin Farm,
41 Cemetery Rd, Marlboro, NY 12542 |