The U.S. bishops will vote this week on advancing the cause for the
canonization of Dorothy Day, a 20th century Catholic social activist and
tireless advocate for the poor.
The move is being sought by Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, Archbishop of
New York, as his archdiocese was Day's home from 1916 until her death in
1980.
Ecclesiastical law requires that the bishop pursuing a canonization
consult with his regional bishops' conference on whether or not the
cause is prudent.
Cardinal Dolan is asking for the consultation during
the U.S. bishops' general assembly being held Nov. 12-15 in Baltimore.
In 2000, Cardinal John J. O'Connor, then-archbishop of New York,
submitted Day's cause for canonization to the Vatican. At that time she
was given the title “Servant of God.”
That title indicates that her cause is under investigation, and should
the Vatican announce Day lived a life of heroic virtue, she will then be
called “Venerable.”
Born and raised in Chicago, Day was baptized Episcopalian at the age of
12. As a young girl, she fasted and mortified her body by sleeping on
hardwood floors. One journal entry from those early years expresses her
desire to suffer for the sins of the world.
Her life soon changed as the 1910s brought about a stark shift in the
U.S. social climate. Day read Upton Sinclair's scathing depiction of the
Chicago meat-packing industry in “The Jungle,” which marked a turning
point in her personal ideology.
She dropped out of college and moved to New York, where she took a job
as a reporter for the country's largest daily socialist paper, The Call.
She eventually settled in Staten Island, living a peaceful, slow-paced
life with her common law husband Forster Batterham.
Conflict arose, however, when Day became increasingly drawn to the
Catholic faith – praying rosaries consistently and even having their
daughter baptized as a Catholic.
Batterham, a staunch atheist,
eventually left them and Day was herself received into the Catholic
Church in 1927.
Along with the personalist philosopher Peter Maurin, she founded the
Catholic Worker Movement in 1933. Living the Catholic notion of holy
poverty and practicing works of mercy, the two started soup kitchens,
self-sustaining farm communities, and a daily newspaper.
The Catholic Worker Movement continues to focus on justice and
hospitality for the poor on the margins of society, and expresses
pacifism and nonviolence.
It is based on the philosophy of personalism, which holds that the
human person must always be regarded first and foremost as a person, and
which respects human rights and freedom.
Day was also an advocate for distributism, an economic system proposed
as a third way between capitalism and communism. Distributism was
developed in large part by the English Catholic writer G. K. Chesterton,
and seeks widespread property ownership.
Distributism is inspired particularly by the social encyclical “Rerum
novarum” of Pope Leo XIII. The movement holds that a just social order
is better achieved when property and capital are owned by many people
rather than by the state or by a few ultra-wealthy individuals.
Poverty, performing works of mercy, solidarity with the poor, and faithfulness of scripture were the marks of Day's life.
“Because I sincerely loved His poor, He taught me to know Him. And when
I think of the little I ever did, I am filled with hope and love for
all those others devoted to the cause of social justice,” Day wrote of
her experiences in her 1940 work “From Union Square to Rome.”