Dorothy Day: The Catholic Worker Movement

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Dorothy Day was a well-known activist during the 1900s. She was most known for her protests and starting the Catholic Worker Movement with Peter Maurin. Dorothy Day was a non-violent activist who worked for peace, social justice, and people’s rights by protesting inequality and starting the Catholic Worker Movement. Dorothy Day is an American catholic women. She was awarded the Pacem in Terris Award in 1971. Her father was John Day and her mother’s name is Grace Satterlee. Day had four siblings. She lived with an english scientist for a while then they got married. They divorced when Day became catholic. Dorothy Day survived the San Francisco earthquake in 1906. The Vatican gave her the title “The Servant of God”. The Vatican said she might be canonized a saint. Dorothy Day was born on November 8,1897 in Brooklyn, New York. She was raised in San Francisco. Dorothy read almost her whole local library. She read all the time and she was deeply affected about what she read. She read about many social problems that inspired her to do good. She read so much that when she was older she wrote her own books.Her family was very poor and they lived in a very small house. Her family was so poor that she was embarrassed of her house and her family. So every day she would take a …show more content…

It was originally a newspaper that people could buy, but it has evolved into something more. The Catholic Worker wanted to spread pacifism to the war-torn United States in the 1930s. People went around, trying to spread justice throughout the world. They were most known for the Houses of Hospitality. They created homes for people in need. People could get more involved with the poor through the Catholic Worker. They participated in activities such as labor unions, human rights movements, and cooperatives. They worked for the development of a non-violent culture. The Catholic Worker was a really big part of Dorothy Day’s

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