34 pages • 1 hour read
David BrooksA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Tumult seems to have marked Dorothy Day’s life: from her earliest memories of surviving the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, through her pious teenage years and subsequent hedonistic young-adult years aligned with Anarchism and Communism, through her eventual draw toward Catholicism and conversion to it. Day’s personal losses, from break-ups with lovers to estrangement from family, led her nearer to her yearning for God and faith that led her to become Catholic. Personal suffering and loss, as well as her political-activist background, led her to found a newspaper called The Catholic Worker, as well as a movement consisting of boarding houses and communes in which Catholic Workers offered aid, shelter, and connection to those in need.
As another individual with a turbulent and passionate past, Day learned through the losses of lovers and family members, as well as through firsthand experience caring for those dying of the 1918 flu epidemic, that suffering makes one better equipped to minister to those who are also suffering: “Recovering from suffering is a lot like recovering from a disease. Many people don’t come out healed; they come out different” (95-96). Day’s lifelong yearning for God functioned as a form of suffering, which only found resolution when she aligned herself with the Catholic faith and eventually converted.
By David Brooks