Dorothy Day is not a familiar name in the United States or around the world.
However, for about half of the 20th century, her name was synonymous
with orthodox Catholic teachings on social justice and morality. U.S.
bishops hope to have Day, who died in 1980, canonized.
Some Catholics see the bid to declare Day a saint as a political move to
reconcile the conservative and liberal wings of the American Catholic
Church.
Day did not always fit the common stereotype of a Catholic saint. In a
1973 interview, she offered a no-nonsense rationale for feeding the poor
that is earthy, not ethereal.
“If your brother is hungry you feed him," she said. "You don’t meet him
at the door and say ‘be thou filled’ or wait a couple of weeks and
you’ll get a welfare check. You sit him down.”
Day was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1897 to a middle class Protestant
family that rarely attended church. She became radicalized at an early
age, says biographer Jim O’Grady, author of "Dorothy Day: With Love for
the Poor."
“When she moved to New York in her late teens, she was around a lot of
radical agitators. She wrote her left-wing periodicals. She was a friend
of the labor movement and anti-war groups," O'Grady says. "She
interviewed Trotsky when he passed through New York City. She did some
heavy drinking with Eugene O’Neill in a saloon in Greenwich Village and
at some point she had an abortion and a divorce. So that was her youth.”
In "The Long Loneliness," Day’s 1952 autobiography, she recounts a deep
spiritual crisis, followed by a religious awakening which climaxed with
the 1926 birth of her daughter, Tamar, who Day had baptized.
"The way she described it, she was so suffused with gratitude that she
turned to God," O'Grady says. "She herself was baptized as a Catholic
and she embarked on this lifelong journey of learning what that was. But
she never stopped having this deep fervor for issues of social
justice."
In 1933, during the Depression, Day and a fellow activist began
publishing a newspaper called The Catholic Worker. Its headquarters in a
poor New York neighborhood soon grew into a place where the homeless
could always find shelter and the hungry could get a meal.
The movement spread. Today there are well over 100 Catholic Worker
affiliates worldwide. Sister Mary Ann Walsh, spokesperson for the United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops, says it is these works of mercy
which underlie efforts to canonize Day.
“Dorothy Day certainly was an extraordinary person who lived in
voluntary poverty and spent her whole life serving the poor and that
certainly that characterizes a saint," she says, "somebody who could be
so selfless in their giving of themselves to others.”
However, Day often took positions which were at odds with the mainstream
Catholic hierarchy. She advocated for the redistribution of wealth, for
example, and fought for workers' rights. She was a pacifist, even
during World War II, which nearly doomed The Catholic Worker.
Walsh acknowledges Day's priorities did not always coincide with those of church leaders.
“She was in the trenches," Walsh says. "She didn’t see her role in life
as trying to lobby bishops, for example. She never craved the limelight
in any way.”
Tom Cornell, who worked with Day for decades at The Catholic Worker, is
certain she was a saint. He also believes efforts to canonize her now
could be an effort by top church officials to bridge American
Catholicism’s conservative and liberal wings.
He notes that some sainthood advocates emphasize only her path from
leftist youth to Catholic convert, not her tireless work to organize
unions, end war, and build housing and soup kitchens.
“I wouldn’t say I’m suspicious," Cornell says, "but The Catholic Worker
gets a little upset when we see… no mention of the reason why these are
needed [which is] because of the failure of our social and economic
system, the failure of capitalism, the feeding on war, and making war
necessary.”
Before Day can be declared a saint, there must be two proven miracles
attributed to her intercession. It’s a bureaucratic process than can
take decades to complete.