Click on people's faces in the photo to tag them. Michael will be asked to approve all tags before others can see them. |

On Pilgrimage
ISBN: 978-0-8028-4629-7
Dorothy Day (1897–1980), widely known as the founder of the worldwide Catholic Worker movement, has been described by historian David O’Brien as “the most significant, interesting, and influential person in the history of American Catholicism.” Robert Ellsberg says of her, “In combing the practice of charity and the call to justice, Day represents a type of holiness not easily domesticated but perhaps of special relevance to our times.” On Pilgrimage gathers diary entries written by Day in 1948 that intimately reveal both her spiritual life and the personal ideals that guided her tenacious pursuit of social justice.
On Pilgrimage is published here with a foreword by Michael O. Garvey and a substantial introduction by Mark and Louise Zwick that highlights Day’s early life and her commitment to the Catholic Worker movement.
ISBN: 978-0-8028-4629-7
Dorothy Day (1897–1980), widely known as the founder of the worldwide Catholic Worker movement, has been described by historian David O’Brien as “the most significant, interesting, and influential person in the history of American Catholicism.” Robert Ellsberg says of her, “In combing the practice of charity and the call to justice, Day represents a type of holiness not easily domesticated but perhaps of special relevance to our times.” On Pilgrimage gathers diary entries written by Day in 1948 that intimately reveal both her spiritual life and the personal ideals that guided her tenacious pursuit of social justice.
On Pilgrimage is published here with a foreword by Michael O. Garvey and a substantial introduction by Mark and Louise Zwick that highlights Day’s early life and her commitment to the Catholic Worker movement.
