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Reconciliation and T

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Blurred Lines Among and Between Victims and Perpetrators ... Repentance, transformation and restitution by perpetrators take place in a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reconciliation and T


1
Reconciliation and T R Commissions Part 2
  • Dynamics and Insights

2
Blurred Lines Among and Between Victims and
Perpetrators
  • Rsch in South Africa reminds us of the dangers of
    oversimplification and homogenization.
  • That is, not all victims are the same,
  • not all perpetrators are the same, and
  • some victims are also perpetrators of
    injustice or atrocities.
  • This is relevant to issues such as amnesty and
    compensation.
  • Thus, it would be helpful to employ a more
    precise terminology than merely victims and
    perpetrators.
  • e.g., Secondary Victims e.g. dependents of a
    jailed breadwinner
  • Beneficiaries as distinct from perpetrators
  • Direct vs Indirect Perpetrators to take into
    account persons issuing orders
  • Institutional Perpetrators e.g., Security
    Service in S.A.
  • Sectoral Perpetrators e.g., mass media,
    health agencies, business
  • Passive Perpetrators i.e. those who
    committed acts of omission

3
Moral GenerosityDanger of Excessive Reliance on
It
  • Repentance, transformation and restitution by
    perpetrators take place in a context of grace or
    acceptance that comes from the moral generosity
    of victims who want to build an inclusive
    society.
  • However, reconciliation can become overly
    dependent upon the moral generosity of victims.
    In other words, it is not self-evident that
    morally transformative approaches are suitable
    or politically workable.
  • In South Africa, national reconciliation was
    premised upon moral transformation of victims as
    forgiving rather than angry, and generous rather
    than demanding.
  • The strong pressures to forgive misplaced the
    burden of reconciliation on victims rather than
    on those who were responsible for apartheid.
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