John Loughery is the author, with Blythe Randolph, of the new biography Dorothy Day: Dissenting Voice of the American Century. His other books include Dagger John: Archbishop John Hughes and the Making of Irish America. He lives in New York.
Q: You write of Dorothy Day, "In the end, no category
of common experience will neatly and precisely define this woman." Why did
the two of you decide to write a biography of Dorothy Day?
A: The book was Blythe Randolph's idea and she enlisted me
as coauthor when I completed my previous book. Blythe had long been an
admirer of Dorothy for her progressive social work.
I don't think that her Catholicism was of particular concern
to Blythe (who is Episcopalian), while the overlap of the progressive politics
and the Catholicism was of interest to me as I was raised Catholic (and have,
since completing the book, returned to the Church, though that is a long story
in itself).
My previous book, Dagger John: Archbishop John Hughes
and the Making of Irish America, which came out in 2018 from Cornell University
Press, was about another Catholic figure, but a person of a radically different
temperament.
He was very institution-minded, tough as nails, not a
pacifist at all. He fought the nativist bigots in the 1830s and 1840s who
were burning Catholic churches; he built Saint Patrick's Cathedral; he
supported the Union cause during the Civil War and helped Lincoln personally in
many ways.
But I was intrigued to write about a 20th-century Catholic
figure who spoke to me in a very different way.
There simply is no other modern-day American, no one I can
think of, who is at all like Dorothy Day in combining a deeply felt faith and
unshakeable attachment to the Church with a concern for social justice to the
extent that she felt and lived it.
This sometimes put her at odds with the Church (e.g., in her
stand on pacifism, in her belief that the Catholic Church should do more about
racial injustice and aiding the homeless) in contrast to Hughes, who was never
critical of the Catholic hierarchy. He was part of the Catholic
hierarchy.
But both books were fascinating to research and write in
their different ways. The common link was my interest in religious history
and American political history. People who are involved in those two
discrete fields are just fascinating to me.
Q: How did you research the book, and did you learn anything
that especially surprised you?
A: The three key sources of the book were the Dorothy Day
Archives at Marquette University in Milwaukee; the published diaries and
memoirs of those who knew her; and the interviews we did with anyone we could
find who knew her. People were quite generous in sharing recollections. She
touched so many lives.
Q: How would you define Day's relationship to religion?
A: To discuss Dorothy Day simply as America's most ardent
advocate for the homeless, most determined pacifist, and an activist willing to
go to jail who opposed the excesses of capitalism, U.S. foreign policy (and our
involvement in all wars: WWI, WWI, Korea, Vietnam), the arms race, etc., is to
dwell on a very partial picture of this woman.
She came from a conservative Republican family with no
interest in -- actually, a disdain for -- religion in any form. She remade
herself into a left-wing intellectual-activist, but her conversion to
Catholicism in her 20s was the truly radical decision of her life.
For her, a political stance founded in a belief in God, one
that accepted the teaching of the Sermon on the Mount as a core truth, was a
deeper, more meaningful commitment to concern for others than a non-religious
stance.
One reason she lost interest in the labor movement was that
she came to feel the pro-union men were interested in better wages and working
conditions for laborers but not in any larger social and spiritual change in
American life.
One reason she thought so highly of Cesar Chavez was that he
seemed to her a fighter for his people and social justice and a man of
faith.
Her faith in God was everything to her. Alleviating
poverty and suffering was an important goal, and connected to her spirituality,
but a belief in God and Christ was above and beyond all other concerns.
She saw them as linked, though, in a way that many left-wing
secular people do not and in way that many devout Catholics do not. She is
a great anomaly: someone who took the words of the Gospel literally, who
embraced the radicalism, the radical love, of the New Testament as few people
have.
Q: What do you think Day's role would be if she were alive
today, and what do you see as her legacy?
A: I have no clue as to what her legacy will be. I can only
hope some part of her outlook will take root.
But I can't tell if our society is willing to look long and
hard at who we are and where we are headed, before it is too late -- in terms
of what we are doing to this planet, in terms of what our now-maniacal
obsession with comfort, security, technology, and nationalism at the expense of
more humane or spiritual values is doing to us as a society -- or if things
have reached an untenable point.
But I am a pessimist in a way that Dorothy Day was
not.
If alive today, she would be doing just what she did every
day of her life from the 1930s until her death in 1980: leading by example,
helping those in need, speaking out against abuses of power and indifference to
those who have less (undocumented immigrants included, or especially).
She'd protest and go to jail when she had to, as she always
did. She would speak out against walls and ever-more money spent on
armaments.
In the course of my research, I said to one Catholic Worker
who knew her, "What in the world would Dorothy have made of Donald
Trump?" His response was "Oh, she'd seen worse."
And, of course, that's true.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I am currently working on a book about William Cobbett,
the early 19th-century British journalist who could be said to have founded
investigative or advocacy journalist. The ultimate "speaking truth to
power" newspaperman.
He was the Christopher Hitchens of his day, which sums him
up as well as anything I can say about him.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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