Prof Anne Klejment to speak on Dorothy Day, Thursday, February 24 at Noon – St. Thomas Libraries Blog
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Prof Anne Klejment to speak on Dorothy Day, Thursday, February 24 at Noon

All are cordially invited to hear Dr. Anne Klejment, UST history professor, speak on Dorothy Day.  This Noon Conversation: Dorothy Day and Social Justice will be held on Thursday, February 24 at Noon until 1pm in the O’Shaughnessy Room of the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library.  You are welcome to bring your bag lunch if you wish; beverages and a light dessert will be provided.

Dr. Klejment earned a Ph.D. in history at the State University of New York at Binghamton and has taught at UST since 1983.  Her research and publication has focused on Catholics and nonviolence, the early liturgical movement, and Catholic publishing in the mid twentieth century.   

Please plan to join us — meet Dr. Anne Klejment – and Dorothy Day.  Questions or in need of parking information?  Please call Julie Kimlinger at 651-962-5014.

What drew you to study Dorothy Day so intently? 
 I had heard about Dorothy Day from my mom, whose high school classmate was one of the founders of the Rochester (New York) Catholic Worker.  Her classmate’s son was also a draft resister during the Vietnam War.  I was writing about Catholic protest against the Vietnam War and about nonviolent movements—focusing on Martin Luther King and the Berrigans—when I realized that I couldn’t understand Dan and Phil without understanding Dorothy Day.  So I started reading…and the rest is history! 

How long have you been researching her? 
I’ve been reading about her since the mid seventies and I started serious research in the early 80s, when on the strength of a published bibliography on the Berrigans, I got a contract to compile a Dorothy Day/Catholic Worker bibliography and index.  That was published in 1986 with my mom as co author.  Since then I’ve co-edited another book about Catholic Worker pacifism and have written several articles on Dorothy Day. 

Any favorite things about her that you have discovered? 
Her love letters are phenomenal.  They confirmed what I had suspected: that although she gave up Forster Batterham, the father of her child, because he would not marry her in either a civil or religious ceremony, that they chastely loved each other until their deaths!  What a struggle she had trying to convince him to marry her on the one and trying to leave him on the other because she knew how stubborn he was.  A very powerful story.

Her life in 1917 as a young radical and protester against WWI and the actions of her radical friends against the war.

The complex and loving relationship of Day and her daughter Tamar. 

Her emphasis on continuing conversion throughout your spiritual life! 

What were your favorite resources to use in researching her life? 
I love Bob Ellsberg’s books, which are compilations of her writings—By Little and By Little is a sampler of her published writings.  All the Way to Heaven contains her letters to Forster.  I particularly love her journals, The Duty of Delight, because it provides such an authentic view of her daily life and the challenges that she had to meet as the head of the Catholic Worker movement. 

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