Dorothy Day is called “The Champion of the Poor”. At age 30, she converted to Catholicism. What made her a saint and unlike thousands of people who devoted their lives to helping the poor was her relationship with God which grew closer and stronger throughout her life. Dorothy Day grew up in a middle class home in 1897. Her father, John Day was an atheist and her mother had been raised an Episcopalian. The Days hardly ever went to Church. However, Dorothy was curious about God since she was little. She remembered being interested in religion and reading the Bible. At the age eight, she was “proudly pious” (Stone, 20). One day an Episcopal priest in the neighborhood knocked on the Day’s front door. He invited them to attend his parish. From that day, her mother, Grace Day, and her and her four brothers regularly attended Sunday services. Many of the prayers from the “Book of Common Prayer” she remembered throughout her life, particularly the Psalms, which she quoted often in her books and articles. Dorothy went to jail when she and a group of woman suffragists went to the White House to protest the treatment of other suffragists in jail. Dorothy asked for a Bible and felt comforted from the Psalms since it expressed sorrow and hope. She traveled to New Orleans later on in …show more content…
I did not find my faith or search for it. I was born into a Muslim family and grew up with a religious foundation unlike her. My search for faith is similar to her in that as I got older my faith in God became stronger and stronger due to the experiences in my life which I knew God alone had helped me too. Also, just like she was interested in God from a young age, I was little when I believed in God and prayed to him as well. Like she thought of the good God did for her in making her a mother and the feelings she felt when her daughter was born, I see the good God has continuously done for me with situations in my