Special consultative relationship with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations
8th Day Center for Justice was a Roman Catholicnon-profit organization based in Chicago, Illinois. Named after the Christian concept of an eighth day, it was founded in 1974 by six congregations of religious men and women. The center was advocacy-centered (primarily around Catholic social teaching) and was associated with over 40 religious communities, allowing the congregations to pool their resources for the work.[1]
According to its mission statement, the center existed to promote "a world of right relationships in which all creation is seen as sacred and interconnected. In such a world all people are equal and free from oppression, have a right to a just distribution of resources, and to live in harmony with the cosmos."[2]
8th Day Center for Justice had a special consultative relationship with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations.[11] In April 2010, the center was named a Human Rights Champion by the Chicago Religious Leadership Network on Latin America.[12]
8th Day Center for Justice closed in 2017.[13][14]
These members helped to staff the center. Longstanding staff included Sister Kathleen Desautels.[15] In addition, 34 other congregations served as member friends or contributing members.
^Hombs, Mary Ellen; Mitch Snyder (1982). Homelessness in America: a forced march to nowhere. Washington, D.C.: Community for Creative Non-violence. p. 82.