The claim that displaced persons retain the right to pursue knowledge, education, and intellectual development as a fundamental aspect of human dignity and justice.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz devoted her life to knowledge despite extraordinary constraints on women's intellectual freedom. She understood that the mind cannot be exiled. For refugees and immigrants, intellectual refuge means preserving access to education, libraries, language learning, and critical thought—recognizing that forced displacement aims not only to remove bodies but to silence voices and erase cultural knowledge. This concept asserts that justice requires protecting the intellectual lives of displaced persons, enabling them to study, create, and think freely. Educational access becomes a justice issue, not a luxury. Sor Juana's own struggles against institutional barriers illuminate how marginalized communities maintain intellectual dignity through determination and community support, offering frameworks for advocacy that centers knowledge-seeking as resistance and survival.
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