On Forgiveness
There's always profuse talk about the virtues of Forgiveness. This is a subject that
puzzles me.
It seems to me that
we are all products, and victims, of our social context. Our
behavior, and our values, will by default have much more to do with
our cultural environment than with our personal philosophical
stances. Grew up in the US? Chances are you are familiar, and
comfortable, around Baseball, Burgers, and the Imperial System of
Measures. Grew in in Uruguay instead? Then it's likely that you get
pretty intense about Soccer and that there is a bag of Yerba Mate in
your kitchen. These peculiarities of our culture are easy to detect.
But what about those characteristics of our culture that run so deep,
so silently, that we mistake them for innate ideas? Some values are
so pervasive that it seems almost as if our brains come pre-wired for
them. Forgiveness is one of these values.
Forgiveness is a
very peculiar idea once you detach it from the detailed spelling of
religious mandates. Forgiveness has a very specific set of
behavioral expectations. It demands that you consciously,
deliberately, forget any injuries you were subjected to, that you
accept the pain those injuries caused (or still cause) and
furthermore, that you forfeit any claims to deliverance, retribution
or compensation for those injuries.
And we accept that
strange concept as something Noble, Honorable, Admirable. To “bear
grudges” is seen a sure symptom of an unstable mind. To “forgive
and forget” is what we were taught as children, it is what we teach our children, it is what is expected of us, it is what we expect from others.
But does Forgiveness
stand to reason? Is there anything admirable in allowing a villain
to walk away unscathed from the scene of a crime?
Forgiveness
is not about balance, or justice, or the redressing of grievances, or
the healing of wounds. Forgiveness is not about righting wrongs and
correcting the wrongdoer.
Forgiveness is a
doctrine of pusillanimity and abject submission.
Forgiveness elevates
the perpetrator and crushes the victim, it strongly encourages
unethical behavior and informs the future actions the predator.
Forgiveness is
fertilizer for injustice.