---
title: "Dorothy Day Center"
url: "/academics/centers-institutes/dorothy-day-center"
type: page
date: 2026-05-28
updated: 2026-06-18
---

# Dorothy Day Center

Centers &amp; Institutes

# Dorothy Day Center

An internationally recognized hub to engage students on issues of peace, social justice, and Catholic social teaching with an exhibit and special focus on Dorothy Day.

 

Image

      ![Dorothy Day accepting a medal](/sites/default/files/styles/4_3_327w/public/media/2026-05/DD-accepts-DLS-Medal-May-19%2C-1975-2.jpg?h=a9575592&itok=54hlUS2Q) 

 

 

## Living Out the Social Justice Tradition

The Dorothy Day Center for Study and Promotion of Social Catholicism is a resource for the campus, our local community and the worldwide Lasallian network on the Catholic social tradition. Located in the Social Action Suite in room 2.03 of Kelly Commons, its goals embody the Manhattan University's [Lasallian mission](/about/lasallian-catholic-heritage "Lasallian Catholic Heritage"), which includes social justice, faith in the presence of God, and concern for the poor.

The Center continues our history of living out the Catholic social justice tradition, which includes activism for labor justice, the Pacem in Terris Institute, the foundation of the **Peace and Justice Studies** program, the promotion of fair trade, and the development of community-engaged learning. View [lectures and events](/academics/centers-institutes/dorothy-day-center/lectures-events "Annual Lectures and Events") the University has hosted to honor Day's legacy.

Named in honor of Servant of God, Dorothy Day, the Center seeks to study and promote the work of the following key figures and social movements she is associated with:

- Peter Maurin, a former member of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools,
- The Catholic Worker Movement,
- Pax Christi,
- The Plowshares Movement,
- Labor justice movements, and
- Movements for pacifism and nuclear disarmament.

The Center aims to raise greater awareness of the witness of Dorothy Day and the wider Catholic social justice tradition. The Center is a living space and we encourage people to come in to browse the displays, read more about Dorothy's life, and engage with her work. In spirit of Dorothy's legacy of community building, anyone interested in the Center or wants to know more can reach out via email to <ddcenter@manhattan.edu>.

[View the Board of Directors](/academics/centers-institutes/dorothy-day-center/board "Dorothy Day Center | Board of Directors")

## About Dorothy Day

By Julie Leininger-Pycior, Professor Emeritus of History

Image

    ![a young Dorothy Day](/sites/default/files/styles/original_aspect_ratio_400/public/media/2026-05/DD_285x205.jpg?itok=lTxcJY8r) 

Dorothy Day was the leader of the Catholic Worker movement, founded in 1933. To this day, Catholic Workers live in radical solidarity with the poor and protest injustice. Day has been recommended by the Archdiocese of New York and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops as a candidate for sainthood.

Dorothy Day was born in Brooklyn on November 8, 1897. Preferring radical activism to classroom discussion, she dropped out of the University of Illinois and headed to New York City where she reported for socialist periodicals. She settled in a Staten Island bungalow with biologist Forster Batterham. Her partner believed neither in marriage nor religion, however, so when she had their baby Tamar baptized, the relationship ended. Meantime she prayed, â&#128;&#156;Where were the Catholics?â&#128;&#157; after witnessing Communists advocate for the unemployed. Soon after, she met philosopher Peter Maurin, an adherent of Catholic social justice teachings, and she began the Catholic Worker newspaper, maintaining the movementâ&#128;&#153;s pacifism even during World War II.

Her postwar protests against nuclear armament were unpopular, but later, growing opposition to the Vietnam War reinvigorated the Catholic Worker movement. (The Catholic Church has condemned most wars since the Cold War era, one measure of her continued influence.) In later life she continued attending daily Mass and pursued her activism, including being jailed alongside striking farmworkers a few years before her death. Her daughter Tamar Hennessy would eventually make Day a grandmother of nine children. Over the course of her life Day authored seven books. In her autobiography, she wrote, â&#128;&#156;The final word is love... We know him in the breaking of bread, and we know each other in the breaking of bread... We have all known the long loneliness and we have learned that the only solution is love and that love comes in community.â&#128;&#157; Day died on November 29, 1980 -- and is buried in Pleasant Plains on Staten Island.

## Student Internships and Research

The Dorothy Day Center aims to help students with internships and research projects. Past projects include:

- 2020: â&#128;&#156;Bridging Science with Social Justice: What Public Health Can Learn from Dorothy Dayâ&#128;&#157;: Aimen Khurram
- 2019: Dorothy Day: A Twentieth Century Take on Twentyâ&#128;&#147;First Century Environmental Injustices on Low Income American Communities (Shannon Colford)
- 2018: Dorothy Dayâ&#128;&#153;s Feminism and Peace (Shannon Raczynski)
- 2017: Challenging The Social Order: Worker Cooperatives Live Out the Vision of Dorothy Day (Emily Center)
- 2016: Dorothy Dayâ&#128;&#153;s Witness and Manhattan University (Alannah Boyle)