Jacques Loew, a
Dominican priest, who began working in the docks of
Marseille in 1941, effectively started the worker-priest movement. Loew had been sent by fellow Dominican
Louis-Joseph Lebret to "study the condition of the working classes" but not to actually join the workers.
Gradual suppression In 1945,
Pope Pius XII "approved (reluctantly) the daring social experiment of the French worker-priests." Loew's May 1951 report defending the movement, written to
Giovanni Montini (the future Pope Paul VI), then the assistant
Cardinal Secretary of State, ultimately failed to convince the pope and the movement was forced to shut down in 1954. Many of the priests joined in campaigns for improved pay and conditions and the movement became prominent in the
industrial unrest of 1952 and 1953. This resulted in the factory owners complaining to the Catholic Church that the priests were being divisive by supporting the
unions. The French bishops informed the worker-priests that they must return to their parishes. About 50, however, chose to stay on at their work. Moreover, by 1953, of some 90 priests, 10 had married, and about 15 were working with the communists. "the Pope sent verbal orders that the movement be suppressed, but the French cardinals managed to persuade the Pope to allow the worker-priests to continue 'in principle,' after some major changes in the setup." In November 1953, all worker priests were recalled and required to leave their work and unions. In 1954, Loew acquiesced to the Vatican and quit his job; he then established the
Saints Peter and Paul Mission to Workers, which trained priests from among the working class. Loew then travelled to Africa, then worked in the
favelas of
São Paulo, Brazil from 1964 to 1969, and then established the
School of Faith in
Fribourg, Switzerland. The theology of the Worker-Priest is in part contained within Loew's publications:
Les dockers de Marseille (1944),
En mission prolétarienne (1946),
Les Cieux ouverts: chronique de la mission Saints Pierre et Paul (1971), and ''Face to Face with God: the Bible's Way to Prayer'' (1977). In 1963, priests were allowed to return to the industrial workplaces, and in the 1990s there were about 2,000 priests of the workers mission in France, although they were aging in line with the wider population of Catholic priests in that country. ==Later influence==