The understanding that justice requires supporting people's ongoing capacity to define themselves rather than fixing them in categories of victim or offender.
Sor Juana refused to be defined by her circumstances, continuously reinventing her intellectual and spiritual identity throughout her life. This concept challenges restorative justice frameworks that can inadvertently fix people into permanent identities: the eternal victim needing healing, the permanent offender needing reformation. True justice supports people's freedom to evolve, change, and redefine themselves beyond the harm they experienced or caused. This means creating conditions where both survivors and those responsible for harm can develop new capacities, relationships, and understandings of who they are. It requires restorative practitioners to see themselves as supporting ongoing transformation rather than achieving final resolution. Sor Juana's intellectual journey demonstrates that freedom means the continuous right to question, grow, learn, and become something not yet imagined. Restorative justice honoring her legacy will create space for people to move beyond their trauma or their guilt, to access education and opportunity, and to participate fully in reimagining their identities and communities. This transforms justice from a closing of accounts into an opening toward futures not yet written.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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