Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Institutional Accountability as Spiritual Practice

Understanding that structural change and institutional justice are not separate from but essential to spiritual and personal transformation.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana was ultimately silenced by institutional power—the Church hierarchy, patriarchal structures, colonial authority. Her tragedy is not merely personal but systemic. Genuine forgiveness and reconciliation, her legacy suggests, require institutional change, not just individual transformation. This is sometimes lost in discussions that treat justice and forgiveness as primarily interpersonal or spiritual matters. True reconciliation in contexts of systematic injustice demands that institutions themselves change: acknowledge wrong, redistribute power, implement safeguards, and demonstrate commitment through sustained action. Sor Juana's tradition insists that justice is not completed until the institutions that enabled harm are transformed. This is not separate from forgiveness work; it is the ground on which authentic forgiveness becomes possible. When institutions continue unchanged, victims are asked to forgive in systems designed to harm them again. Institutional accountability—reorganizing power, changing policies, creating transparency—is the material expression of commitment to genuine change and the precondition for meaningful reconciliation.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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