The act of defending one's right to exist, think, and speak generates positive karma by resisting the karmic harm of oppression and domination.
Sor Juana's Response to Sor Filotea and her other defenses of her intellectual work were not aggressive; they were necessary acts of self-preservation. Buddhist karmic justice recognizes that defending oneself against harm is not the same as creating harm. When Sor Juana spoke against injustice or claimed her right to learn, she was not accumulating negative karma—she was refusing to accept the karmic consequences of her oppression. This concept challenges the notion that suffering oppression silently is virtuous. To defend one's dignity, rights, and humanity is to actively engage in the karma of justice. By articulating her position, Sor Juana modeled how marginalized people can resist without perpetuating the cycle of domination. Self-defense—intellectual, spiritual, physical—becomes a karmic act that interrupts patterns of harm and plants seeds of accountability in those who would oppress.
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