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May 1, 2008

Happy 75th Birthday to the Catholic Worker




On this day in 1933, the first issue of The Catholic Worker appeared, promising to take seriously the church's program to"reconstruct the social order" according to the teachings of a certain revolutionary, anti-imperialist, and egalitarian organization from the Palestine, long ago.

Introducing the paper, founding editor Dorothy Day wrote:


This first number of The Catholic Worker was planned, written and edited in the kitchen of a tenement on Fifteenth Street, on subway platforms, on the “L,” the ferry. There is no editorial office, no overhead in the way of telephone or electricity, no salaries paid.

The money for the printing of the first issue was raised by begging small contributions from friends. A colored priest in Newark sent us ten dollars and the prayers of his congregation. A colored sister in New Jersey, garbed also in holy poverty, sent us a dollar. Another kindly and generous friend sent twenty-five. The rest of it the editors squeezed out of their own earnings, and at that they were using money necessary to pay milk bills, gas bills, electric light bills.

Somehow the movement kept going. There are now almost two hundred Worker houses serving the poor in the United States and abroad.

A selection of Catholic Worker writings is available at its website.

Thanks to Mike at Pie and Coffee for marking the date.


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Brandon Scott Watson - 5/3/2008

Not only are Catholic Worker communities fairly common, there are a hefty number of communities that are not Catholic Worker communities themselves, but are modeled on Catholic Worker ideas (independent hospitality houses, for instance). It's a less public and more diffuse movement than it used to be (and the Catholic Worker newspaper itself is not as significant an influence as it was in the days of Day and Maurin), but it's thriving. Even if the Catholic Worker communities themselves dried up tomorrow, there are still thriving and independent offshoots.


Scott McLemee - 5/2/2008

There are a few Worker houses just in my own city. I don't see any reason to doubt the figure.


Ralph E. Luker - 5/2/2008

I see no reason to doubt the CWM's own claim of 185. You can go to the site to which Scott links and see for yourself. Although Peter Maurin and Dorothy Day are long dead, I suspect that CWM may currently have as many houses as it ever had.


Serge Lelouche - 5/2/2008

I find this very hard to believe. If you read the Catholic Worker these days its devoted exclusively to the notion that Jesus wants America to have open borders.
There are a few worker houses left in Europe, and a few in the US, but 200? The movement is pretty much dead.