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By Thea Jarvis
This July, nearly 200 people gathered for a weekend at Immaculate
Conception Seminary in New Jersey to commemorate 50 years of workers from the
80 or so autonomous but loosely affiliated houses of hospitality around the
country and those who had been connected in some way to the Catholic Worker
movement over the years.
Throughout the weekend there were indications that our time
together was as much a seedbed for ongoing thought and action, as it was an
opportunity for exchanging information and ideas, or learning something of the
past, editor Peggy Scherer wrote of the meeting in the August issue of
The Catholic Worker newspaper published in New York.
No doubt Dorothy Day would have appreciated the fact that
contemporary fellowship and renewal were looking to the present and
future they were shaping, as much as to the past in which they are
significantly rooted.
On May Day of 1933, Dorothy Day and the young helpers who hawked
the first issues of The Catholic Worker tabloid in New York Citys Union
Square had before them that same vision of past roots and present experience
that would make their movement soar.
Dorothy had met Peter Maurin in 1932, shortly after her memorable
visit to the national shrine in Washington, D.C. on the feast of the Immaculate
Conception. There, she had prayed fervently that some way would open up
for me to do something for the poor, to line myself up on their
side, to work for them, she recounted in her story of the Catholic Worker
movement, Loaves and Fishes.
Answer To Prayer
Her encounter with Peter Maurin she later perceived as the result
of her prayer. Maurin introduced her to his own Christian personalist
philosophy, which included the founding of a newspaper for clarification
of thought, the opening of houses of hospitality and the establishment of
farming communes. He also steeped her in what Dorothy Day called a
Catholic outline of history, a helpful adjunct to her secular education
since she had only embraced the Catholic faith in 1927.
The social teachings of the Church brought them together at a time
when the country was floundering and people were suffering. Unemployment,
homelessness and hunger were all a part of the picture painted by a depression
economy and both felt the Catholic Church had an answer to the hopelessness
that was the prevailing malady of the times.
The first issue of The Catholic Worker contained news
accounts of the exploitation of Negroes in the South, and the plight of the
sharecroppers; child labor in our own neighborhood; some recent evictions, a
local strike over wages and hours; pleas for better home relief, and so
on, Dorothy Day recalled in Loaves and Fishes.
The newspaper was but the first step in the progression of
Catholic Worker growth. Opening a house of hospitality where, in Peter
Maurins words, the rich were given the opportunity to serve the poor,
followed quite naturally as homeless men came to the New York newspaper office
and were fed and young college students and intellectuals stopped by for what
Dorothy called coffee and talk.
Visitors
Distinguished speakers, authors and scholars visited the office as
well, giving lectures on scripture, worship and peacemaking that were, no
doubt, the predecessors of the Friday night meetings held regularly in present
day Worker houses.
In Loaves and Fishes, Dorothy Day remembered, It
sometimes seemed that the more space we had, the more people came to us for
help, so that our quarters were never quite adequate. Because of this,
the Worker center enlarged and changed, moved and re-established itself over
the years to accommodate volunteers and residents, street guests and visitors.
It did not take long before The Catholic Worker newspaper had
established a circulation of over a hundred thousand subscribers, and houses of
hospitality patterned on the New York effort were opening up around the country
and abroad.
Peter Maurins three-pronged philosophy was implemented in
1933 with the acquisition of a small Staten Island farm. It was the first of
several agricultural efforts that moved toward Maurins ideal of an
agronomic university, where people learned to love the labor of the land while
being renewed by their closeness to the earth.
Worker Goals
Throughout its history, the Catholic Worker movement has had as
its goal the carrying out of the corporal and spiritual works of mercy. In
addition, workers espoused, insofar as possible, a life of voluntary poverty,
allowing them a union with those they served.
From its beginnings, the Worker has had a pacifist orientation,
opposing war in all its forms, in the hearts of men as well as on their
battlefields. Such opposition frequently has meant facing prison for civil
disobedience, an experience neither scorned nor rejected by workers willing to
stand by their principles.
Peter Maurin died in 1949, Dorothy Day in 1980. Some call them
social activists; others say they were radical reformers. Many view them as
saints. Surely, time will designate their proper place in the worlds view
of history.
But 50 years after they began the Catholic Worker movement with
the publication of a modest, eight-page newspaper, their dynamic approach to
life and its complex challenges continues to exercise a profound influence on
the Church and the secular world as well.
Their movement was, in its simplest reduction, about the business
of loving. Not the superficial, threadbare loving that leaves us empty and dry
of heart, but the harsh and dreadful loving that, in its power, calls forth the
best in us and those with whom we share this love.
Forty years after its inception, the Catholic Worker movement
continues to succeed because it has attempted to follow the basic blueprint of
its founders, what Dorothy Day called a revolution of the heart.
When we begin to take the lowest place, to wash the feet of
others, to love our brothers with that burning love, that passion, which led to
the Cross, then, she reflected in Loaves and Fishes, we
can truly say, Now I have begun.
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