Dorothy Day
By: Jessica • Essay • 2,379 Words • November 20, 2009 • 1,660 Views
Essay title: Dorothy Day
Dorothy Day was born on November 8th, 1897. As a young child she received little exposure to Christianity, except for a few neighbors. Throughout her life she found religion very interesting and she always wanted to know more about the subject. Dorothy was well educated and started her early career as a journalist, like her father.
In her childhood Dorothy experienced many moves. In 1906 an earthquake hit San Francisco, where they were a fairly wealthy family, and Dorothy’s family moved to the south side of Chicago, where her father did not have a job at first. After a small period he received a job as an editor at a Chicago newspaper, but the position wasn’t as prestigious as his previous job. This is where Dorothy received her first experience with Catholicism. While in Chicago she had her first true experience with the poor, when she would take walks through the poor neighborhoods.
After she dropped out of the University of Illinois she moved to New York where she found a job as a reporter. She befriended many communists and agreed with Karl Marx in believing that religion was the “opiate of the people”. As a reporter she usually covered the social issues and rallies of the times. She interviewed all types of radical people fighting for causes.
Dorothy got involved in the protests herself, like when she was arrested in 1917 with 39 other women fighting for women suffrage in front of the White House. The women all organized a hunger strike while in captivity, that resulted in a presidential pardon for all of the women. She also protested American involvement in WWI, when she wrote for The Masses. After this time period she felt that merely writing the issues was insufficient, so in 1918 she enrolled in a nursing program.
Then she spent a short time in New Orleans then bought a house on Staten Island after selling rights for a movie about a book she wrote. She began a common-law marrige with Forester, who was opposed to marrige and religion. Then she became pregnant and in 1927 her daughter Tamar Theresa was born, then she and her daughter were baptised in the Catholic church.
She later met Peter Maurin, a French immagrant, who inspired her to do more outreach work to the struggling people of New York. Together with little money and a great deal of faith in Jesus they started The Catholic Worker and it became very successful in a short amount of time.
Peter and Dorothy took their outreach a step further when they started to allow needy people eat meals and sleep in the apartment that Dorothy was staying at, this is also where they did a lot of the work for the newspaper that they published. Later the Catholic Worker movement had swept the nation and in 1936 there were 33 Catholic Worker houses.
She continued to speak out against war and violence in WWII and also during the cold war with the U.S.S.R. and she became a spokesperson for the left-winged Catholics. Her type of Catholicism was speading by her example. She was such a strong model for Catholics, Christians and every kind of people everywhere. Pope John Paul II opened her case up for saint hood, although she remained to be humble through out her life and continued to work with the less fortunate. Day said, “Don't call me a saint -- I don't want to be dismissed that easily.” Calls attention to just how humble she was.
In analyzing Dorothy Day it is not very valid to use Karl Marx because she disproves his theory that “religion is the opiate of the people”. She was active politically and socially before she was religious, that much is true but after she became a Catholic and met Peter who was also a very devout man, she began to live, breathe, and act out social change more intensely than ever before. Religion was her life blood and the teachings of Jesus Christ inspired her to new levels of action against the oppressed people of the nation.
In the area of psycoanalital analysis, Freud is far from the truth that religion hindered her development. It is hard to tell if the different stages as a youth were met or not. She did come out of an unconventional childhood, because she moved many times in her youth, but also once she became independent on her own. Although it would be hard to believe that her id was not properly developed because I don’t believe that it comes natural to help and reach out to people when they are in need and especially when they are complete strangers. Religion did not cause Dorothy into a recession but instead religion inspired her in a way that might not have been possible if it wasn’t for the Catholic faith.
Day was well acquainted with Marx in her early stages of her life but she decided she would use the ideas of Max Weber and use Catholicism as a means for social change. She took the teachings of Jesus to heart and tried to help in every