The rigorous, ongoing interrogation of one's own complicity in unjust systems, essential for authentic satyagraha and liberation struggles.
Sor Juana's philosophical and confessional writing reveals someone constantly questioning her own motives, privileges, and limitations. She examined how power operated through her, how colonial and patriarchal logics had shaped her consciousness. This decolonial self-examination is crucial to satyagraha: Gandhi insisted that resisters must turn the mirror inward, examining their own violence, prejudices, and attachments before expecting oppressors to change. Sor Juana's practice teaches that nonviolent resistance requires psychological and spiritual honesty—recognizing where we have internalized oppression, where we unconsciously replicate hierarchies, where our own hearts harbor violence. This ongoing self-scrutiny prevents movements from becoming mirrors of the systems they oppose. It grounds satyagraha in humility and wisdom, ensuring that the struggle for justice includes transformation of the resisters themselves, creating conditions for genuine reconciliation rather than mere victory.
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