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Msgr. George Higgins:A "Labor Priest" Challenges UsSeptember 1993By: Bishop John H. Ricard S.S.J.Auxiliary Bishop of BaltimoreChairmanUnited States Catholic Conference Committee on Domestic Policy
For more than a century, Msgr. Higgins has been the bridge between the Church and the labor movement and a pe-eminent analyst and articulator of Catholic social teaching. In the Conference and across the country, he has challenged our Church to take our social tradition seriously. His powerful intellect, his respectful candor, his refreshing consistency, and his remarkable loyalty to both Church and labor, have made this Chicago priest a symbol of what is best in our social justice tradition. This year Msgr, Higgins, working with William Bole, has authored Organized Labor and the Church: Reflections of a Labor Priest. In this Labor Day Statement, we share just a few of the insights contained in this very readable and challenging summary of the wisdom of the best known "labor priest." Not everyone will agree with Msgr. Higgins' analysis or agenda, but no serious student of the Catholic social tradition can dismiss it. Here are just a few brief excerpts from the book:
Labor Priest
Some would say that at this point, prayers are all that American labor movement has going for it. I take a different view. No doubt the movement finds itself on a downward slide. But I prefer to look upon labor's movement on decline as a period of transition... Not only labor, but the Catholic Church and other faith groups have arrived at a turning point. During the 1930's and beyond, the American labor movement drew timely support form churches and synagogues. The Catholic Church in particular blessed the struggles of workers to form independent unions and secure a living wage. After labor gained recognition in many industries, religious groups began to lose interest in the labor cause, generally speaking. More recently, with a revival of anti-unionism by employers, religion and labor have slowly begun to renew their ties. Will the Catholic Church, my church, reclaim its heritage of support
for the organization of average working people? I am afraid I cannot say
for sure. (p.5)
Changing Challenges
While Catholic remain more supportive of unions than do Protestants, the gap is narrowing.... This is mainly due, I suspect, to the thinking of many upwardly mobile Catholics. Many of them have bought into the idea that while unions may have served a useful purpose when their fathers , grandfathers, or great-grandfathers struggled to make ends meet, that is no longer the case. They seem to think in other words, that in a society as affluent as our own, workers can readily fend for themselves in the so-called free market; workers have no need to organize. Sad to say, they are wrong about that. Their own relative affluence has blinded them to the fact that, like their immigrant forebears, millions of today's workers struggle to maintain a minimum standard of living. Many of these workers are themselves recent immigrants, but not all by any means. A growing number of second, third and fourth generation American workers, who thought that they, too, were climbing up the economic ladder, now find themselves slipping back into poverty or near-poverty. All this, however, seems to have escaped the notice of many affluent Americans, Catholic included. During the 1980's they made much of the fact that millions of new jobs had appeared every years int he United States. They seem not to know, or at least not to care, that a sizable percentage of these jobs paid poverty-level wages. For too many workers, economic growth meant twice the jobs at half the pay. (p.66) As we near the final laps of a century that made great strides in the labor field, the labor movement is once again, a live issue. The right itself is seldom explicitly or directly challenged as a matter of principle or theory. But in everyday practice, the right to organize faces a huge assault. Hundreds of thousands of workers struggle against great odds to achieve or hold on to the basic protection and benefits of collective bargaining shared by their fellow workers in other industries and other countries. In their efforts to form new unions or hold on to ones that exist, workers
have met with widespread and increasing employer opposition — which frequently
violates the spirit and all too often the letter of the law. This led the
American bishops in their 1986 pastoral letter on Catholic social teaching
and the American economy to state that they "firmly oppose organized efforts,
such as those regrettably now see in our country, to break existing unions
and prevent workers form organizing. (p. 71)
New Labor — Church Cooperation
The labor problem is not a matter of ancient history. It is an ongoing
problem that call for active involvement on the part of those who believe
in social justice. While organized labor is undoubtedly far from perfect
— I even have intimations at times the my own church is far from perfect
— no other movement in sight would enable American workers to protect their
legitimate economic interests. No other movement would enable workers to
play an effective and responsible role in helping to promote the general
economic welfare both at home and abroad. (p. 78)
Labor and Church Institutions
This means, at the very least, that church leaders and administrators of church-related institutions must unequivocally recognize the right of their employees to organize, if the workers so desire, for the purpose of collective bargaining. Any attempts, director of indirect, to circumvent or interfere with the free exercise of this right will predictably lead to serious trouble. Such interference could divide the Catholic community for many years to come and neutralize the effectiveness of our programs for social justice both at home and abroad. This is simply another way of saying, in the words of the synod of bishops, that "anyone who ventures to speak to people about justice must first be just in their eyes." (p. 115) Furthermore, as I have told union leaders dealing with hospitals and
other church-related institutions is not the same as dealing with major
corporations. By their own design, corporations exist in large part to
maximize profits. Catholic hospitals, on the other hand, exist to perform
the works of mercy. Unions should always keep in mind that these institutions
are, after all, religious. Unions need to appreciate the sensitive nature
of certain facts, particularly strikes, in the context of a ministry such
as health care. The nature of the institutions calls for a somewhat more
tactful approach than when taking on, say, a textile mill in South Carolina.
I am probably saying no more than any good unionist would know intuitively
— that organizing a religious instruction requires a finer touch. The point
is worth underlining nonetheless. (p. 128)
A Visit to Disneyland
I am often asked: Why are unions needed in this day and age? People
should not ask me. They should ask the maid at Disneyland and other low-wage
workers. If her situation was like that of other minimum-wage workers,
she probably had not health insurance, in addition to no living wage.
Health insurance, which originated at the bargaining table, represents
one of organized labor's great contributions to the American worker. Without
this coverage, people can run up bills for heath care that would otherwise
land them in the poorhouse. And yet, millions of non- union workers have
no health insurance; as a result, more than thirty million Americans are
not covered and several times as many are under-insured. (pp. 181-182)
The Lay Vocation
I am persuaded that, proportionately speaking, the justice and peace
work of the church has tended to be a bit too clerical, too institutional,
or, if you will, too "churchy," for lack of a better word. Before Vatican
II, paradoxical, the Catholic social action movement in the United States,
though somewhat limited in scope and burdened with an inadequate, top-down
type ecclesiology, tended to emphasize more than we do today the laity's
independent role, as citizens and social problems. At present, despite
our greater theological awareness of the church as the "people of God,"
we tend to emphasize the role of church professionals — be they clerical
or lay — in promoting justice and defending human rights. (p. 213)
The Higgins Credo
"Effective labor unions are still by far the most powerful force in
society for the protection of the laborer's rights and improvement of his
or her condition. No amount of employer benevolence, no diffusion of a
sympathetic attitude on the part of the public, no increase of beneficial
legislation, can adequately supply for the lack of organization among the
workers themselves." I have spent my life saying this, in one way or another.
(p. 78)
Conclusion:
Sometimes people ask "Who will replace Msgr. Higgins?: The answer is
"no one can replace Msgr. Higgins because he's still carrying this mission
forward; because he's still the indispensable bridge between Church and
labor; and because no individual can fill his shoes. But al of us can work
with him to strengthen the ties between Church and labor; all of us are
called to take up the task of defending the dignity and rights of workers.
And on this Labor Day we should begin by committing ourselves to reading
Msgr. Higgins' book and accepting his challenge to renew and strengthen
the traditional ties between our Church and the working people of our land.
1. The book is available from Paulist Press for $12.95. Call 1-800-235-8722.
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