Catholic Worker Movement

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The Catholic Worker Movement was founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in 1933. One of its guiding principles is hospitality towards those on the margin of society. To this end there are over 185 local Catholic Worker communities providing social services. Each house has a different mission, going about the work of social justice in their own ways, suited to their region of the country. The group also campaigns for nonviolence and is active in protesting war, as well as the unequal distribution of wealth globally. Dorothy Day also founded The Catholic Worker newspaper which is still published, and sold at 1 cent per copy.

"Our rule is the works of mercy," said Dorothy Day. "It is the way of sacrifice, worship, a sense of reverence."

Contents

Background and Mission

The Catholic Worker movement was founded in 1933 during the Great Depression by Dorothy Day at the urging of Peter Maurin. It is best known for houses of hospitality located in run-down sections of many cities, though a number of Catholic Worker centers exist in rural areas. Food, clothing, shelter and welcome is extended by unpaid volunteers to those in need according to the ability of each household. In 1995 there were 134 Catholic Worker communities, all but three in the United States.

The Catholic Worker is also the name of a newspaper published by the Catholic Worker community in New York City. From 1933 until her death in 1980, the editor was Dorothy Day, a journalist who was received into the Catholic Church in 1927. Writers for the paper have ranged from young volunteers to such notable figures as Thomas Merton, Daniel Berrigan, and Jacques Maritain. (Many Catholic Worker communities publish newsletters or journals chiefly for local distribution.)

Beyond hospitality, Catholic Worker communities are known for activity in support of labor unions, human rights, cooperatives, and the development of a nonviolent culture. Those active in the Catholic Worker are often pacifists people seeking to live an unarmed, nonviolent life. During periods of military consciption, Catholic Workers have been conscientious objectors to miliary service. Many of those active in the Catholic Worker movement have been jailed for acts of protest against racism, unfair labor practices, social injustice and war.

Catholic Worker communities have refused to apply for federal tax exempt status, seeing such official recognition as binding the community to the state and limiting the movement's freedom.

With its stress on voluntary poverty, the Catholic Worker has much in common with the early Franciscans, while its accent on community, prayer and hospitality has Benedictine overtones.

"We try to shelter the homeless and give them clothes," Dorothy Day explained, "but there is strong faith at work. We pray. If an outsider who comes to visit us doesn't pay attention to our prayings and what that means, then he'll miss the whole point."

It is unlikely that any religious community was ever less structured than the Catholic Worker. Each community is autonomous. There is no board of directors, no sponsor, no system of governance, no endowment, no pay checks, no pension plans. Since Dorothy Day's death, there has been no central leader.

--Taken from Jim Forest on the Catholic Worker Movement for The Encyclopedia of American Catholic History

See also

Catholic Worker House Listing

In the United States

Most Houses don't have websites, but these are some that do

  1. Maggie's Place Phoenix, AZ
  2. Andre House Phoenix, AZ
  3. Oakland Catholic Worker Oakland,CA
  4. Dorothy Day House Berkeley, CA
  5. St. Benedict Catholic Worker Fresno, CA
  6. San Diego Catholic Worker San Diego, CA
  7. Temenos Catholic Worker San Francisco, CA
  8. Catholic Worker Farm Sheep Ranch, CA
  9. Magdalene House Coastside Catholic Worker Half Moon Bay, CA
  10. Los Angeles Catholic Worker Los Angeles, CA
  11. St. Martin de Porres House Hartford, CT
  12. Hartford Catholic Worker Hartford, CT
  13. Mary Harris Catholic Worker Washington, DC
  14. The Open Door Community Atlanta, GA
  15. St. Jude Catholic Worker House Champain, IL
  16. St. Elizabeth Catholic Worker Chicago, IL
  17. Holy Family Catholic Worker House South Bend, IN
  18. Des Moines Catholic Worker Community Des Moines, IA
  19. Silver Spring Catholic Worker Silver Spring, MD
  20. Haley House Boston, MA
  21. Winona Catholic Worker Winona, MN
  22. Fargo-Moorhead Dorothy Day House of Hospitality Moorhead, MN
  23. Las Vegas Catholic Worker Las Vegas, NV
  24. St. Francis Farm Lacona, NY
  25. Utica Catholic Worker Utica, NY
  26. Holy Family Catholic Worker House Briarcliff Manor, NY
  27. Grace Place Catholic Worker Community Cincinnati, OH
  28. Catholic Worker Community of Akron Akron, OH
  29. Archbishop Oscar Romero Catholic Worker House Oklahoma City, OK
  30. St. John Bosco House Eugene, OR
  31. St. Martin de Porres Catholic Worker Harrisburg, PA
  32. Duncan and Porter Houses and Farm Pittsburgh, PA
  33. Casa Juan Diego Houston, TX
  34. Bread and Roses: A Catholic Worker Olympia, WA
  35. Tacoma Catholic Worker Tacoma, WA
  36. St. Isaac of Nineveh - Gift of Tears Catholic Worker Spencer, WV
  37. Casa Maria Catholic Worker Milwaukee, WI
  38. Raleigh Catholic Worker Community and Hospitality House Raleigh, NC
  39. Father Charlie Mulholland Catholic Worker House, Garner, NC
  40. Silk Hope Catholic Worker, Siler City, NC

In Other Countries

  1. Vancouver Catholic Worker Canada
  2. London Catholic Worker England
  3. Bread and Roses Germany
  4. The Fig Tree Catholic Worker in Hammarkullen Sweden

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