Catholic Civil Rights Organizations

Friendship House

Friendship House, founded in the 1930s by Catherine De Hueck Doherty, provided aid to the poor. The Friendship House was born of Doherty’s vocation from Christ to serve Him through immersion in poverty in the slums. Doherty took her prayer into action, founding the first Friendship House on September 14th, 1934, in Toronto. Sustained by prayer, Friendship House housed, educated, clothed, and fed the poor. Friendship Houses subsequently opened in Harlem, Chicago, Wisconsin, Washington D.C., Oregon, and Louisiana. As the operation grew, Catherine De Hueck Doherty became an advocate for social justice (Sharum, 1997).

Catholic Worker

The Catholic Worker Movement was founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in the midst of the Great Depression. They published the first issue of The Catholic Worker newspaper on May 1, 1933 and sold each copy for a penny. The paper was “for those who think that there is no hope for the future, no recognition of their plight” (History of the Catholic Worker Movement). Inspired by Catholic Social Teaching, the newspaper “discussed radical social change, support for workers, problems of industrialisation and the growth of cities. They suggested positive ways to tackle these things” (Dorothy Day). A grassroots movement arose from the ideals put forth by The Catholic Worker. Catholic Workers opened autonomous houses of hospitality and farming communes throughout the United States. The Catholic Worker lifestyle resembled that of religious orders, “With its stress on voluntary poverty, the Catholic Worker has much in common with the early Franciscans, while its accent on community, prayer and hospitality has Benedictine overtones” (Forest, 1997). But Dorothy Day did not create a blueprint for the Workers to follow. She simply lived her life and served her vocation in accordance with the Sermon on the Mount (The Life and Spirituality of Dorothy Day).

Through their indiscriminate ministry to the poor, Catholic Workers contended with racial discrimination. Shifting inner city demographics resulted in the mostly white Catholic Workers serving Black neighborhoods. “The Baltimore Catholic Worker, which was staffed by white workers, offered shelter to African Americans fleeing terrible conditions in the South” (Rice, 2019). The city deemed the integrated community a “public nuisance” and shut it down. Despite institutional intimidation, Catholic Workers did not shy away from interracial cooperation and justice. The Catholic Worker logo, designed by Ade Bethune, depicts a Black laborer shaking hands with a white laborer while Jesus embraces them both in his outstretched arms.

As a proponent of nonviolent protest – protesting for voting rights, labor rights, and an end to the military industrial complex – Dorothy Day was a natural ally for the civil rights movement. She took several trips to the American South to document the conditions that Black Americans endured. One such trip took place in October 1956, just after the lynching of Emmett Till and during the Montgomery Bus Boycotts. Documenting low wages, inadequate education, and horrific violence against African Americans, she asserted that whites had ‘come to deny God in his brother, the Negro’” (Rice, 2019). She included her articles about this trip in her original manuscript for her 1963 book, Loaves and Fishes, highlight on an interracial farming commune she had visited. The chapter, entitled “The Negro and the Land of Cotton,” was “an interracial back-to-the- land venture that placed exceptional value on racial equality, the communal sharing of property, and dedication to pacifism” (Rice, 2019). The chapter was cut during the review process because it was considered too political.

Initially, Dorothy Day argued that Black liberation movements should focus on developing Black financial and societal infrastructure (Rice, 2019). However, as she learned more about Black American history and developed “a greater understanding of the pervasiveness of white superiority and prejudice,” Day lost confidence in any one solution to racism in the United States (Rice, 2019). But she continued to assert that “‘No one has a right to sit down and feel hopeless. There is too much work to do’” (Callaway, 2025). Inspired by St. Thérèse of Lisieux’s “little way,” Day stressed the importance of small acts of service. She recognized that the weight of rectifying institutionalized injustices could easily overwhelm even the most enthusiastic volunteers. So, in much the same way that civil rights organizations fought for change on a local level, she taught Catholic Workers to focus on the small acts of kindness and charity that they could accomplish in their day to day lives.