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Summary: (DOC #170) Summarizes Peter Maurin's worldview and discusses his new social order and how his life embodied his ideas. Reveals the sources of his thought such as Proudhon, Kropotkin, Guardini and Karl Adam.
In 1932, Peter Maurin, founder of the Catholic Worker movement, was
working at hard manual labor at Mount Tremper, New York, at a boys'
camp where he mended roads, cut ice, and did other chores winter and
summer and received his living, not a very munificent one, in return.
As a French peasant he lived on soup and bread. His account at the
grocer did not come to more than a few dollars a week. He slept in
the barn which was as close to the Stable as he could get. He spent
seven years in the vicinity of Kingston, New York, studied, worked and
prepared what he liked to call the Green Revolution. Before this he
had travelled through the States and Canada as an unskilled laborer.
Before that he had worked in France, where he was born, at the one
thing he was skilled at, teaching with the Christian Brothers. But he
believed too, that the scholar had to become a worker not only that he
might understand the conditions and problems of the worker, but that
the worker too might become a scholar, because Peter believed in THE
PEOPLE changing their own conditions. He did not speak in terms of
THE MASSES, being swayed by some dictator demagogue.
Peter Maurin studied the prophets of Israel and the Fathers of the
Church; he studied Proudhon, Karl Marx, Kropotkin and familiarized
himself with utopian socialist thought as well as Marxist thinking.
He knew to whom to turn among Catholic thinkers, and he introduced us
to Romano Guardini, Karl Adam, Luigi Sturzo, Vincent McNabb, among the
priests, and to E. I. Watkin, Christopher Dawson, G. K. Chesterton and
Hillaire Belloc as well as E. J. Penty and Peter Kropotkin, who was in
a way his favorite among the laywriters. When he waved the
encyclicals at us, it was not only the social encyclicals of the
Popes, but also that on St. Francis of Assisi. He preferred St.
Francis' way to the industrial council way. He always aimed at the
best, and to him voluntary poverty, manual labor was the beginning of
all true reform, which was to begin with one's self. First of all he
was a personalist and a Communitarian. "People are always saying,
'they don't do this, and they don't do that,'" he would cry out in
ringing accents, "WE is a community, THEY is a crowd." And a lonely
crowd, David Reisman would say, himself crying out against "the damned
wantlessness of the poor." Peter would have liked Reisman's book as
he would have liked Martin Buber's book, PATHS IN UTOPIA. He wanted
people to be taught to want the best, and the best for him was the
immediate program of the works of mercy, practiced in the cities and
farming communes set up in the countryside where workers and scholars
could get together to try to rebuild society within the shell of the
old by founding better institutions to take the place of soulless
corporations. (He spoke and wrote in phrases so packed with thought,
that to expand them would mean the writing of a book.) He saw the
need for the works of mercy as a practice of love for our brother
which was the great commandment and the only way we can show our love
for Christ, and he saw too that such a practice would mean conflict
with the State. "Personal responsibility, not state responsibility,"
he always said.
* * *
Peter's teaching meant the immediate establishment of houses of
hospitality because it was a time of depression and not only the
worker, but young Catholic college graduates were unemployed. Peter
shocked people by calling for an "abolition of the wage system" and
self employment. Young people gave their services and unemployed
workers gave their skills, and readers of THE CATHOLIC WORKER sent in
material goods and money, so that for the last twenty years we have
kept going on this basis of voluntary poverty and "abolition of the
wage system," for those preferred to give their services rather than
go out and earn a wage for them.
* * *
This self employment was an immediate remedy for unemployment but
the long term program meant substituting a new social order to take
the place of both capitalism and communism. Peter did not believe in
the use of force to bring about this new society, so from the first we
have opposed class war, race war, civil war, imperialist war, and have
been surrounded by them all. There is even the war between the worker
and the scholar, and Peter faced the reality of that. He spoke of the
treason of the intellectuals and also of the fault of the worker who
permitted his work to be treated as a commodity to be bought and
sold.
* * *
The impact Peter made on us all, from one end of the country to the
other, so that houses of hospitality and farms were undertaken from
coast to coast, was because he personally lived a life of poverty and
work. He knew the skid rows of the country. He never asked anything
for himself. His speech was "yea, yea," and "nay, nay." He was a
great indoctrinator, a great agitator. He believed in "a theory of
revolution" and advocated much study. "The evil is so deep seated,"
he said, "that of course much of the time will be given up to an
immediate practice of the works of mercy." But he believed too, in
constantly trying to create order out of chaos. "To be a social
missionary," he said in one of his essays, "requires social
mindedness, historical mindedness and practical idealism."
Because Peter loved most of all what he called the green
revolution, we are beginning our twenty-first year with emphasis on
the land.
This text is not copyrighted. However, if you use or cite this text please indicate the original publication source and this website (Dorothy Day Library on the Web at http://www.catholicworker.org/dorothyday/). Thank you.
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