"Catholic Worker Positions"
by Dorothy Day
The Catholic Worker, May 1972.
Summary: A concise restatement of the Catholic Worker philosophy emphasizing personal responsibility,
a decentralized society, direct action, houses of hospitality, a revolution from below, and pacifism. (DOC
#519).
The general aim of the Catholic Worker Movement is to realize in the individual and in society
the expressed and implied teachings of Christ. It must, therefore, begin with an analysis of our
present society to determine whether we already have an order that meets with the requirements
of justice and charity of Christ.
The society in which we live and which is generally called capitalist (because of its method of
producing wealth) and bourgeois (because of the prevalent mentality) is not in accord with
justice and charity -
IN ECONOMICS - because the guiding principles is production for profit and because
production determines needs. A just order would provide the necessities of life for all, and needs
would determine what would be produced. From each according to his ability, to each according
to his needs. Today we have a non-producing class which is maintained by the labor of others
with the consequence that the laborer is systematically robbed of that wealth which he produces
over and above what is need for his bare maintenance.
IN PSYCHOLOGY - because capitalist society fails to take in the whole nature of man but
rather regards him as an economic factor in production. He is an item in the expense sheet of the
employer. Profit determines what type of work he shall do. Hence, the deadly routine of
assembly lines and the whole mode of factory production. In a just order the question will be
whether a certain type of work is in accord with human values, not whether it will bring a profit
to the exploiters of labor.
IN MORALS - because capitalism is maintained by class war. Since the aim of the capitalist
employer is to obtain labor as cheaply as possible and the aim of labor is to sell itself as dearly
as possible and buy the products produced as cheaply as possible there is an inevitable and
persistent conflict which can only be overcome when the capitalist ceases to exist as a class.
When there is but one class the members perform different functions but there is no longer an
employer-wage-earner relationship.
TO ACHIEVE THIS SOCIETY WE ADVOCATE:
A complete rejection of the present social order and a non-violent revolution to establish an
order more in accord with Christian values. This can only be done by direct action since political
means have failed as a method for bringing about this society. Therefore we advocate a
personalism which takes on ourselves responsibility for changing conditions to the extent that
we are able to do so. By establishing Houses of Hospitality we can take care of as many of those
in need as we can rather than turn them over to the impersonal "charity" of the State. We do not
do this in order to patch up the wrecks of the capitalist system but rather because there is always
a shared responsibility in these things and the call to minister to our brother transcends any
consideration of economics. We feel that what anyone possesses beyond basic needs does not
belong to him but rather to the poor who are without it.
We believe in a withdrawal from the capitalist system so far as each one is able to do so. Toward
this end we favor the establishment of a Distributist economy wherein those who have a
vocation to the land will work on the farms surrounding the village and those who have other
vocations will work in the village itself. In this way we will have a decentralized economy which
will dispense with the State as we know it and will be federationist in character as was society
during certain periods that preceded the rise of national states.
We believe in worker-ownership of the means of production and distribution, as distinguished
from nationalization. This to be accomplished by decentralized co-operatives and the
elimination of a distinct employer class. It is revolution from below and not (as political
revolutions are) from above. It calls for widespread and universal ownership by all men of
property as a stepping stone to a communism that will be in accord with the Christian teaching
of detachment from material goods and which, when realized, will express itself in common
ownership. "Property, the more common it is, the more holy it is," St. Gertrude writes.
We believe in the complete equality of all men as brothers under the Fatherhood of God. Racism
in any form is blasphemy against God who created all mankind in His image and who offers
redemption to all. Man comes to God freely or not at all and it is not the function of any man or
institution to force the Faith on anyone. Persecution of any people is therefore a serious sin and
denial of free will.
We believe further that the revolution that is to be pursued in ourselves and in society must be
pacifist. Otherwise it will proceed by force and use means that are evil and which will never be
outgrown, so that they will determine the END of the revolution and that end will again be
tyranny. We believe that Christ went beyond natural ethics and the Old Dispensation in this
matter of force and war and taught non-violence as a way of life. So that when we fight tyranny
and injustice and the class war we must do so by spiritual weapons and by non-cooperation.
Refusal to pay taxes, refusal to register for conscription, refusal to take part in civil-defense
drills, non-violent strikes, withdrawal from the system are all methods that can be employed in
this fight for justice.
We believe that success, as the world determines it, is not the criterion by which a movement
should be judged. We must be prepared and ready to face seeming failure. The most important
thing is that we adhere to these values which transcend time and for which we will be asked a
personal accounting, not as to whether they succeeded (though we should hope that they do) but
as to whether we remained true to them even though the whole world go otherwise.
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