Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Transformation Through Witness: Community as Mirror of Possibility

Harming individuals change through being witnessed by community members who reflect back their capacity for better conduct and moral redemption.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's intellectual and spiritual development occurred within and against communities that witnessed her: the convent community, readers of her works, ecclesiastical authorities, and posterity. While some witnesses attempted to silence her, the collective experience of being seen—of mattering to others—shaped her growth and resistance. Punitive systems isolate harming individuals: incarceration removes them from witnessing communities; shame and condemnation foreclose possibility of change. Restorative approaches leverage the transformative power of witness. When a person who has caused harm meets the person harmed, when they face their community, when they experience both accountability and possibility for redemption, transformation becomes possible. Witnesses reflect back not condemnation alone but also potential: "You have caused harm, and you can also choose differently. You are capable of better." This mirrors how Sor Juana's supporters witnessed her possibility even when institutions denied it. Community witness works precisely because humans are social beings who internalize how others regard them. Punishment says "you are irredeemable." Witnessed restoration says "you have done harm and you can become someone who wouldn't." This shift in what we mirror to people is transformative.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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