Using your position to bear witness to injustice and to hold authorities accountable to their own stated principles.
Sor Juana's writings—her poems, her letter to Sister Philotea, her theological arguments—functioned as acts of witnessing. She documented her own experience of intellectual hunger and constraint, creating a record that could not be erased or forgotten. She also held the Church and civil authorities accountable to Christian principles of equality and justice. In Confucian thought, the scholar has a duty to remonstrate with authority when principles are violated. Sor Juana embodied this tradition: she did not simply obey or quietly resist, but spoke truth about the contradiction between her society's claim to value wisdom and its refusal to educate women. This concept is crucial for anyone in a hierarchical role who recognizes injustice. It means understanding that your position grants you specific forms of visibility and voice—and that using those to bear witness is not disloyalty to the institution but fidelity to principles the institution claims to uphold.
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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