The capacity to articulate one's own truth and defend one's position as essential to justice, contrasting silent submission demanded by punitive systems.
Sor Juana's Respuesta (Response) to the Bishop demonstrates that justice requires allowing harmed or accused parties to speak their truth, not merely accept judgment imposed upon them. In punitive frameworks, silence and submission are often enforced; restorative approaches recognize that genuine resolution requires dialogue where all voices can articulate their reality. This concept applies directly to victim empowerment in restorative justice: victims need not only hear apologies but must have space to fully express the impact of harm and their own agency in determining accountability. For those causing harm, similarly, restorative justice allows explanation and context rather than silencing them into passive punishment. Sor Juana's intellectual courage to defend her right to knowledge and her character against institutional attack models how justice systems must protect the right to articulate one's own story, creating conditions for authentic reconciliation rather than coerced compliance.
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