The practice of suppressing someone's voice or right to knowledge sets in motion karmic chains that compound harm across time and communities.
When institutions, families, or societies silence voices—especially those of women, the poor, or the marginalized—they create karmic debt that accumulates and ripples forward. Sor Juana herself was silenced: forbidden to study, pressured to renounce writing, forced into obedience. Buddhist karmic justice teaches that such suppression is not a neutral act; it is a cause that generates suffering as effect. Sor Juana's fight against silencing reveals that when we prevent someone from knowing, speaking, or becoming, we participate in a cycle of injustice. The consequences extend beyond the individual—they diminish collective wisdom and perpetuate cycles of oppression. Understanding silencing as accumulated karmic injury helps us see why defending intellectual freedom, especially for the powerless, is not merely virtuous but necessary for breaking patterns of harm.
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