BETWEEN THE LINES.In a brief letter to the editors (November 3, 1939) commending Commonweal com·mon·weal n. 1. The public good or welfare. 2. Archaic A commonwealth or republic. Noun 1. on the occasion of its fifteenth anniversary, Dorothy Day Dorothy Day (November 8, 1897 – November 29, 1980) was an American journalist turned social activist and devout member of the Catholic Church. She became known for her social justice campaigns in defense of the poor, forsaken, hungry and homeless. wrote that Catholic Worker cofounder co·found tr.v. co·found·ed, co·found·ing, co·founds To establish or found in concert with another or others. co·found Peter Maurin Peter Maurin (May 9, 1877 – May 15, 1949 born in Oultet, France) was a Catholic activist who co-founded the Catholic Worker Movement with Dorothy Day in 1933. Maurin was born into a poor farming family in southern France, where he was the oldest of 21 siblings. "always says that it is the duty of the journalist to make history as well as record it." By Maurin's standard, few journalists accomplished as much as Day herself. Fifty years after Commonweal printed an excerpt from her then forthcoming autobiography, The Long Loneliness ("The Story of Steve Hergenhan," January 11, 1952), Day remains one of the most unusual journalists in the history of American Catholicism: she made--and is still making--history. I first read The Long Loneliness after coming to the Catholic Worker in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of and meeting Dorothy Day. Rereading it once again, I am struck at how quintessentially Day it is, in both substance and style. There are the cadences, the stories, the pointed references, the setting-matters-straight. There are her repetitiveness, her irony and complexity (early on, she quotes Chesterton on tradition, and in so doing lays the groundwork for her understanding of Christian anarchism Christian anarchism is any of several traditions which combine anarchism with Christianity. Christian anarchists believe that freedom is justified spiritually through the teachings of Jesus. This has caused them to be critical of government and Church authority. ; later in the book she quotes the agnostic William James to argue for a rediscovery of the religious value of voluntary poverty). There are Day's purposeful ambiguity--to protect her privacy and that of others--coupled with remarkable self-revelations; her keen, invigorating in·vig·or·ate tr.v. in·vig·or·at·ed, in·vig·or·at·ing, in·vig·or·ates To impart vigor, strength, or vitality to; animate: "A few whiffs of the raw, strong scent of phlox invigorated her" descriptiveness; layers of self-deprecating humor; and sometimes a wearying polemicism. Altogether, these bring to mind long afternoon conversations with Day. In recent years I have read quotes from Day--transcribed from tape recordings--that for all their recorded accuracy don't truly sound like her. Just as perplexing per·plex tr.v. per·plexed, per·plex·ing, per·plex·es 1. To confuse or trouble with uncertainty or doubt. See Synonyms at puzzle. 2. To make confusedly intricate; complicate. have been the mounting reams of academic papers examining her life and thought. Some read like exercises in self-validating theory rather than accurate assessments of Day herself. One recent commentator, for example, intent on substantiating Day's journalistic acumen, says that her famous postscript in The Long Loneliness ("We were just sitting there talking...") would better have read, albeit less poetically, "We were just writing there when...." No, the point of the matter in The Long Loneliness, as elsewhere in her writings, is that though Day was a professional journalist--and a gifted one--she was first and foremost a conversationalist con·ver·sa·tion·al·ist also con·ver·sa·tion·ist n. One given to or skilled at conversation. conversationalist Noun a person with a specified ability at conversation: . And while The Long Loneliness is her most sustained, disciplined, and stylistic piece of writing, it is, nonetheless, at heart a broad-ranging conversation. In her later years, Day repeatedly threatened to write her "real autobiography." In fact, she took the winter months of 1974-75 away from Manhattan's Saint Joseph House to do so at the Catholic Worker's modest beach bungalow on Staten Island. She intended to call the new book All Is Grace. My impression at the time was that she wished to be more candid about her past than she had been in The Long Loneliness, and that she wanted to write at greater length about a number of people she had known, loved, and worked with. She never got far with the project. I think at that point (she was seventy-seven at the time) Day was close to being worn out, and that she would rather spend hours talking with old friends like Marge Hughes, who happened to be living that winter in the adjacent bungalow. By the spring, Day had passed on the notes she had accumulated to her later biographer, William Miller. (Along with his 1982 biography of Day, in 1987 he published a slim volume titled All Is Grace [Doubleday]. It consisted largely of selected entries from Day's retreat notes, diaries, and letters.) What might Dorothy Day have written in her "real" autobiography? A great deal, no doubt. The Long Loneliness had been completed twenty-five years earlier (and what years those had been: sole leadership of the Catholic Worker movement The Catholic Worker Movement is a Catholic organisation founded by Servant of God Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in 1933. Its aim is to "live in accordance with the justice and charity of Jesus Christ. following the death of Maurin; Vatican II; the civil rights movement and Vietnam; travels to Asia, Africa, Russia, and Australia). Furthermore, in rereading the 1952 book I am struck at just how much is left unsaid, at how much there is "between the lines Between the lines can refer to:
Jesus multiplies fare for his following. [N.T.: Matthew 14:15–21; John 6:5–14] See : Miracle [Harper and Row], had updated the ongoing story of the Catholic Worker, but it was not truly an autobiographical sequel.) Could Day have done better than The Long Loneliness? I have my doubts. It is a twentieth-century classic, and besides, by the 1970s she was too overextended overextended, adj 1. the situation occurring when a prosthetic appliance is inadvertently constructed in such a way that part of the oral mucosa is injured by the appliance. adj 2. to complete such an assignment. Furthermore, The Long Loneliness does brilliantly what she had intended it to do: tell the story of her conversion (or, in Saint Paul's terms, give reasons for the faith that was in her). Between the book's opening chapter--in which Day links writing an autobiography with going to confession--and the book's postscript--in which she ties community and conversation to receiving Communion--she leaves us with the best glimpse we need as to the why and the how of her life. The world and the church have changed decidedly since 1952. But the integrity of Dorothy Day's life--well lived and beautifully told in her autobiography--holds steady and luminous. Patrick Jordan, Commonweal's managing editor, began working with Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker in 1968. He is the editor of Dorothy Day: Writings from Commonweal, to be published by The Liturgical Press in fall 2002. |
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