• Subscribe
  • Log in
  • My Account
  • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • International
    • U.S. Politics
  • Culture
    • Books
    • Film
    • TV
    • Ideas
  • Faith
    • Faith in Focus
    • Faith and Reason
    • Prayer
    • Spirituality
    • Jesuitical Podcast
  • Vatican
    • Vatican Dispatch
    • Vatican News
    • Pope Leo XIV
    • Inside the Vatican Podcast
  • Scripture
    • Scripture Reflections
    • The Word
    • The Good Word
    • Preach Podcast
  • Podcasts
    • The Spiritual Life
    • Jesuitical
    • Inside the Vatican
    • Preach
    • Hark!
    • All Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • All issues
  • Donate

Sections

  • Politics
  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Vatican
  • Scripture
  • Podcasts

More from America

  • Podcasts
  • Video
  • Newsletters
  • Events
  • Voices
  • YouTube
  • Mobile App
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contact Us

Print Edition

June 2026

June 2026

Past Issues

June 2026

Current Issue
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

Sections

  • Politics
  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Vatican
  • Scripture
  • Podcasts

More from America

  • Podcasts
  • Video
  • Newsletters
  • Events
  • Voices
  • YouTube
  • Mobile App
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Contact Us

Print Edition

June 2026

June 2026

Past Issues

June 2026

Current Issue
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
Skip to content
  • Donate
America Magazine

America Magazine

The Jesuit Review

  • Subscribe
  • Log in
  • My Account
Subscribe
  • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • International
    • U.S. Politics
  • Culture
    • Books
    • Film
    • TV
    • Ideas
  • Faith
    • Faith in Focus
    • Faith and Reason
    • Prayer
    • Spirituality
    • Jesuitical Podcast
  • Vatican
    • Vatican Dispatch
    • Vatican News
    • Pope Leo XIV
    • Inside the Vatican Podcast
  • Scripture
    • Scripture Reflections
    • The Word
    • The Good Word
    • Preach Podcast
  • Podcasts
    • The Spiritual Life
    • Jesuitical
    • Inside the Vatican
    • Preach
    • Hark!
    • All Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • All issues
Posted inArts & Culture, Books

Review: 13 ‘misfits’ who spoke truth to power

Gilger - Headshot 2018 by Patrick Gilger, S.J. July 26, 2019

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Chavez
Cesar Chavez, who co-founded the United Farm Workers union in 1962, is pictured in an undated photo. Chavez, who died in 1993, began grass-roots organizing in the 1950s while working in the fruit and vegetable fields of California and defined the farmworker union movement. (CNS file photo)

The first chapter of Can I Get a Witness? is about Cesar Chavez. The first paragraph of that chapter paints a picture of Chavez—diminutive, chestnut-skinned, “handsome but forgettable.”. Here is how that paragraph closes: “That he would organize the first farmworkers union in a struggle for justice that took on the industry of agribusiness scarcely seemed possible.” I was crying by the time I finished reading those words. It was not the last time I would cry while reading the excellent, edifying essays that Charles Marsh, Shea Tuttle and Daniel P. Rhodes have collected for us in this volume.

Can I Get a Witness?

by Charles Marsh, Daniel P. Rhodes and Shea Tuttle (Eds.)

Eerdmans, 368p $26.99

What they have done is gather a set of 13 stories, each a mini-biography of one of those great souls whose faith in Jesus inspired and necessitated and sustained their work toward a more righteous world. Each of these 13 were “peculiar people, dissidents, misfits.” The kind of people “who sing strange and beautiful songs of God’s peaceable kingdom.” It is the editors’ hope that today’s misfit-dissidents will learn something new, something applicable to today’s challenges, from the stories of Howard Thurman and Father John Ryan, of Mahalia Jackson and Dorothy Day. And they will.

You will, too, if you read it. Even if you already knew that it was Father Ryan who coined the phrase “a living wage” or that he played a key role in the passage of the first wage laws that explicitly protected women and children. But more than inspiring snippets of stories that can be pulled out like bon mots at a cocktail party—more even than tales of how fasting or pilgrimage served Cesar Chavez as spiritual tactics and might serve us as such again today—what you will learn from this book is how much you need stories of hope.

If our social activists seem strange, then they are only strange to the extent that they show how much you still hope for a place in that number. And that you still need reminders to hope for such a place.

You will read about how Ella Baker’s grandfather, who was himself a slave, purchased a portion of the land on which he had been enslaved and planted a garden on it. And how watching her grandfather till that soil helped Baker believe that, in author Nicole M. Flores’s words, “change doesn’t happen in an instant. Freedom is a habit, one requiring constant patience.” And you will be a little more patient in imitation of her.

You will read about how William Stringfellow’s devotion to Scripture led him not to withdraw, but to “love the world more readily.” And you will remember how, under the cancer-inducing smog of cynicism that so often covers us, you want that too.

And you will read about how David Dark, who writes glowingly—glowingly—about Father Daniel Berrigan, S.J., wept in his car after seeing the movie “The Mission” because it showed Christianity for what it really is: “a centuries-old witness of long-suffering love.” And you will find, as I did, that the tears on your own face are not so strange after all.

Or, if they are strange, then they are only strange to the extent that they show how much you still hope for a place in that number. And that you still need reminders to hope for such a place.

This article appears in August 5 2019.

Related

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window)X
  • Share on Mail (Opens in new window)Mail
Tagged: Books, Catholic Social Teaching, Latino, Social Justice
Gilger - Headshot 2018

Patrick Gilger, S.J.

Patrick Gilger, S.J., is pursuing a Ph.D. in sociology at the New School for Social Research. He is America’s contributing editor for culture.

More by Patrick Gilger, S.J.

More from America


Be grateful for those who guide you

Be grateful for those who guide you

Full text: Cardinal Czerny’s homily for the ‘beloved land of Cuba’

Full text: Cardinal Czerny’s homily for the ‘beloved land of Cuba’

‘Marty, Life is Short’ on Netflix laughs amid life’s tragedies

‘Marty, Life is Short’ on Netflix laughs amid life’s tragedies

Classifieds

Your source for jobs, books, retreats, and much more.


  • US-China Catholic Association and University of St. Thomas, Houston, Texas Announce 2026 International Conference  July 31-August 2, 2026 “Nourishing Trust & Friendship: Following the Way of Christ”
  • Contemplative Day Retreat, 6/6/26 in person or via Zoom: “The Tree of Life: Esoteric Christianity and the Perennial Mystical Tradition”
  • President
  • Site Manager (Location Richmond, VA)
  • Hold on to Love…with Graces Galore – Sister Ave Clark O.P.

See all classifieds

Most Popular


Vatican warns SSPX leaders of excommunication over ‘schismatic act’ of ordaining bishops
Marco Rubio’s Vatican visit, explained
Taiwan’s tiny Catholic Church faces youth exodus as big powers decide the island’s fate
Performative piety: Why liturgy is not a space for self-expression
Live Zoom Panel: Pope Leo XIV and Donald Trump—Making Sense of an Unprecedented Time

America Today

Your daily guide to the most important stories from the Church and around the world - delivered to your inbox each morning. See more newsletters

June 2026

June 2026

Faith. Culture. Perspective

Support a trusted Catholic voice at the intersection of the Church and the world.

Subscribe

Politics

See all


Trump’s ‘get tough’ on Cuba policy piles on island’s suffering

Taiwan’s tiny Catholic Church faces youth exodus as big powers decide the island’s fate

Catholic ministries in Bangladesh face new challenges from Islamic extremists

Faith

See all


To understand Christian hospitality, look to the host

The Very Young Catholics project: How one book series shares children’s stories from around the world

Education is about more than test results. But how do we tell if it’s working?

Culture

See all


Finding a Lenten vulnerability in Rilke’s ‘Letters to a Young Poet’ 

Review: The ‘Scopes Monkey Trial’ and church-state tensions

Rob Reiner’s gift: Finding humanity—both on and off the screen

Vatican

See all


Marco Rubio’s Vatican visit, explained

Live Zoom Panel: Pope Leo XIV and Donald Trump—Making Sense of an Unprecedented Time

45 years ago today: Attempted assassination of St. John Paul II recalled as turning point in history

Scripture

See all


Death and new life

Chosen by God—or not

What faith and parenting have in common

Podcasts

See all


Father Henri Nouwen 101: The spirituality of a ‘wounded healer’

‘The Bear’ actress Liza Colón-Zayas’s spiritual journey—to agnosticism

Deep Dive: The first American pope—how it happened and what it means

Sections

  • Faith
  • Culture
  • Scripture
  • Politics
  • Vatican
  • Podcast

About America

  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Writing Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Jesuit Vocations

More

  • Donate
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Classifieds Marketplace

America Today

Your daily guide to the most important stories from the Church and around the world - delivered to your inbox each morning. See more newsletters

Sign up
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
© 2026 America Press Inc. | All Rights Reserved. Powered by Newspack
  • Donate

Gift this article