Bringing together spiritual, ethical, and practical dimensions of justice rather than reducing it to law alone.
Sor Juana navigated the intersection of theological, philosophical, and practical concerns, refusing to compartmentalize knowledge. Punitive systems often separate justice from ethics, treating it as a technical legal process isolated from moral, spiritual, or communal meaning-making. Restorative approaches, by contrast, often integrate multiple dimensions: the legal reckoning, the emotional and spiritual healing, the community's moral reflection, and the existential questions about harm and repair. Sor Juana's intellectual tradition suggests that justice is fundamentally about restoring right relationship—with others, with institutions, and with deeper ethical principles. This integration means that a restorative process might include not just practical restitution but also rituals, community witness, honest dialogue, and shared reflection on what justice and repair mean. Restoration becomes whole-person and whole-community work, not merely procedural compliance.
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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