Sugar Creek Gathering 2025 in Video
Photographer Mauro Heck shares some of the videos he took at the Midwest Catholic Worker Gathering at the Sugar Creek Retreat Center in Iowa (Sept. 12 – 14, 2025).
Photographer Mauro Heck shares some of the videos he took at the Midwest Catholic Worker Gathering at the Sugar Creek Retreat Center in Iowa (Sept. 12 – 14, 2025).
Mauro Heck and Mary Farrell share their best photos from the Midwest Catholic Worker Gathering, September 12 – 14, 2025.
Lincoln Rice’s keynote address on the systematic “magna carta” of Peter Maurin’s Easy Essays in the first issues of The Catholic Worker, presented at the Peter Maurin Conference in Chicago, Illinois, on September 7, 2024.
Casey Mullaney writes in memory of Monica Ribar Cornell, a life-long Catholic Worker, mother, farmer, and friend, who died August 8, 2025
For over two decades, CatholicWorker.org has offered free access to Dorothy Day’s writings, a national directory of Catholic Worker communities,…
Here’s the Summer 2025 issue of THE SOWER, the newsletter of Strangers and Guests Catholic Worker Farm. Inside: s solstice peace celebration discover Dorothy Day’s searing 1945 response to the atomic bomb; and an account of six activists’ nonviolent protest at the Kansas City National Security Campus. Plus, Betsy reports on garden volunteers, county-fair weaving, and Brian’s Peacemaker Award in New York.
We are seeking an individual or couple to join us as live-in volunteers and help propel our mission forward. Casa…
Bob Cook was a longtime member of the Des Moines Catholic Worker and a man remembered for his deep faith, radical hospitality, and unwavering commitment to justice. This article includes a video and transcript of Frank Cordaro’s remembrance of Cook at his memorial service.
Twenty-three activists, including Catholic Workers, gathered May 19 outside the Kansas City National Security Campus to protest nuclear weapons production. Six were arrested for trespass, including three Catholic Workers.
A “green revolution” was an integral part of Peter Maurin’s vision for the Catholic Worker. Today, it’s not just rural Catholic Worker farms that attempt to bring that vision to life; many urban houses of hospitality are also tapping into his philosophy…and harvesting more than just food for the table.
Síntesis: Una reimpresión de su relato del parto y nacimiento de su hija Tamar en 1928. La memoria describe la espera para entrar en trabajo de parto y comentarios sobre las mujeres en torno a ella en la clínica Bellevue Hospital. Acompañada por su prima Carol, regresa a Bellevue varios días después cuando sus dolores de parto comienzan. Descripción vívida del dolor que sufrió, sus pensamientos, y los de la gente con la que se encuentra en dichas horas. Tierna descripción del amamantar y sus primeros días con su hija. (The Catholic Worker, Diciembre de 1977, 8, 7. DDLW #583).
We can count the years there has been a Catholic Worker movement (92, as of today), but can we count how many Catholic Worker houses are in it? Jerry Windley-Daoust tackles the question.
Summary: On the tenth anniversary of The Catholic Worker she explains their purpose as promoting love of God and our brother. Their work expresses the beauty of Christianity in supporting the worker, the poor, and eschewing violence. She highlights instances of violent racism. (DDLW #919) The Catholic Worker, May 1943, 4
Here’s the Spring 2025 issue of THE SOWER, the newsletter of Strangers and Guests Catholic Worker Farm.
Soon after Pope Francis died on Easter Monday, April 21, Catholic Workers began paying tribute to the pope who did so much to advance the cause of peace, justice, solidarity with the poor, and environmental stewardship. The Roundtable newsletter rounded up some of the early tributes, which are presented here along with the pope’s final Easter address to the world.
The Simone Weil Catholic Worker (Portland, OR) is looking for a full-time live-in intentional community member/Catholic Worker
For over 20 years, Trinity House Catholic Worker has been dedicated to feeding and housing the marginalized citizens of Albuquerque,…
Catholic Workers engaged in prayer, protest, and acts of civil disobedience in activities held during the Third Meeting of the States Parties to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) earlier this month. The activities included the Ash Wednesday arrest of 17 activists outside the U.S. Mission to the UN. Archbishop John Wester of Santa Fe, New Mexico, celebrated Mass and administered ashes to activists prior to their action on Ash Wednesday, according to Catholic Workers who attended.
Archbishop John Wester celebrated Mass at Our Saviour Church on Tuesday, March 3, during the during the Third Meeting of the States Parties to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) at the United Nations. Opening with a quote from Dorothy Day’s scathing condemnation of the bombing of Hiroshima, Wester went on to reflect on the Beatitudes in light of efforts to abolish nuclear weapons.
“But sometimes you see that a certain help is needed and if you can offer it, you offer it.” – Jenneke and Cees are good friends of the Noelhuis Catholic Worker in Amsterdam. Here’s how they practice hospitality in their marriage