
Howard
Zehr is an professor of Sociology and Restorative Justice.

Within
these walls of concrete and razor ribbon we keep people locked
up, pointing fingers of blame and shame, guarding others from
them.

In
prison, you see all levels of experience, of pain and misfortune.
We all want to be loved and nutured and responded to in a positive
way. Those are the things that link all of us together as human
beings.
Sharon
Wiggins (Zehr, Doing Life, pp. 112-115)

Being
a crime victim is very humiliating because you feel kind of slimy.
There is always some self-blame: we can always find millions of
ways we may have brought this on ourselves.
Ellen
Halbert
(Zehr, Transcending: Reflections of Crime Victims, pp. 168-170)
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Journey to Belonging: Flight from Shame
Howard Zehr
Introduction
In the world of criminal
justice, prison walls are overwhelming realities. Within these walls of
concrete and razor ribbon we keep people locked up, pointing fingers of
blame and shame, guarding others from them. But, the outer walls of prison
are mirrored by inner prisons. Within each prisonerindeed, within
each one of usthere are parts of ourselves that we keep locked up,
pointing fingers of blame and shame, guarding these parts from others.
All of us have tragedies and traumas; all of us have inner wounds, parts
of our personalities that we hide. Do we sentence these parts to life
without parole? Or do we recognize the need for healing?
Those of us enmeshed
in contemporary western culture are used to hearing the concepts of shame
and honor applied to cultures and eras distant from our own. However,
I am increasingly convinced that they continue to operate in powerful,
and often subterranean, ways. In fact, I would like to hypothesize that
they provide an important lens for understanding crime, justice, and the
responses of victims.
To explore this journey,
I suggest we use a lens of trauma. When we use more common shorthand terms
like "crime,"we trigger a host of stereotypes and assumptions
that condition the subsequent dialogue. The lens of trauma, however, may
allow us to explore this reality more objectively, and with greater empathy
and understanding.
I will use this concepttraumaa
bit loosely, as a continuum extending from very high levels of ordinary
stress on one end to traumatic and post-traumatic stress on the other.
Such trauma is a core experience of both victims and offenders. Being
the victim of crime is deeply traumatic; the suffering often includes
threats to fundamental assumptions about identity, relationships and meaning.
Offenders often experience trauma as well, both as a precursor to their
offenses and as a result of their experience of "justice." Their
violence may actually be a re-enactment of trauma that they experienced
earlier but did not respond to adequately. Unfortunately, society tends
to respond by delivering more trauma.
Shame and Humiliation
or Honor and Respect
Shame may also be
an important dimension of this trauma. I am intrigued by the role of humiliation
and the search for its oppositehonor and respectin 1) the
origins of offending behavior, 2) the ways offenders experience justice,
3) the trauma of victimization and 4) the ways victims experience justice.
I am convinced by the argument of psychiatrist James Gilligan, that shamealong
with the desire to avoid, remove or transform shamemotivates much,
if not all, violence.
I also suspect that
shamealong with the desire to avoid, remove or transform shameis
a crucial component of victims' trauma, thus driving and shaping their
needs for justice. Unfortunately, justice, as we know it, often does little
to remove or transform shame, for either offender or victim. In fact,
the process of justice often increases shame and humiliation for all parties.
The result: offenders may re-offend and victims may demand vengeance.
Since the publication
of John Braithwaite's important book, Crime, Shame and Reintegration,
the topic of shame has become highly controversial within restorative
justice circles. If it is true, as Gilligan and Braithwaite suggest, that
shame and the desire to remove it, motivates much crime, then our prescription
for crime is counter productive or ineffective. We impose more shame,
stigmatizing offenders in ways that begin to define their identities and
encourage them to join other "outsiders" in delinquent subcultures.
Guilt and shame become a self-perpetuating cycle, feeding one another.
In fact, psychiatrist Gilligan argues that punishment decreases the sense
of guilt while at the same time accentuating shame, the very motor which
drives offending behavior!
The dynamics of shame
also help to explain why shame is ultimately ineffective as a deterrent
to those at the fringes of society, such as racist groups or paramilitaries.
It feeds into shame/rage cycles and forces those who are ostracized to
come together more urgently. This often strengthens the very phenomenon
we hope to discourage. I remember vividly the reflections of a participant
in one of my courses, a former paramilitary ex-prisoner in Northern Ireland.
It was not shame that caused him to changeindeed, efforts at shame
had strengthened his resolve and his solidarity with his compatriots.
It was a new vision of meaning and belonging that changed him.
The experience of
shame and humiliation is a thread that runs through victims' experiences
as well, and the struggle to remove or transform it is a central element
in the journey to healing and belonging. Why? One reason is that in western
societies, which value power and autonomy, it is shameful to be overpowered
by others. When we are victimized, our status is lowered. We are humiliated
by that event, but also often by the ways that we respond to that eventthe
things we did or didn't do at the time, the ways it affects us afterwards.
Shame is further heaped on us when others do not validate our versions
of what happened, thus forcing us to keep our experiences secret.
The Process of
Justice
Retributive theory
argues that pain will restore a sense of reciprocity, but the dynamics
of shame and of trauma help explain why this so often fails to achieve
what is desired for either victim or offender. Retribution seeks to vindicate
and reciprocate, but is often counterproductive.
In order to progress
on their journeys, both victim and offender need ways to replace their
humiliation with honor and respect. Shame and humiliation must at least
be removed and ideally be transformed. This does not easily happen within
the retributive framework of our criminal justice systems.
Restorative justice
theory, on the other hand, argues that what truly vindicates is acknowledgment
of the harm that has been done to the victim and recognition of his/her
needs. This is combined with an active effort to encourage offenders to
take responsibility and make right the wrongs. By addressing this need
for vindication in a positive way, restorative justice has the potential
to affirm both victim and offender and help them transform their stories.
Telling Our Stories
Our identities are
embedded in our stories, so the re-creation of meaning requires the "re-storying"
of our lives. Those who created the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
in South Africa recognized that healing comes by facing one's past, coming
to terms with it, drawing boundaries around it, and incorporating experiences
of hurt and wrongdoing into a new story. Repressed memories are dangerous;
painful experiences cannot be denied, but must be incorporated into who
we are. Sharon Wiggins was sentenced to death for a crime committed at
age 13 or 14. She is now serving a life sentence. She knows she cannot
deny her past:
"I have a
hard time believing I am the same person who came to prison 27 years
ago. But, I realize that if it were not for those experiences, I would
not be the person I am today. So, I hold on to that part of my past
in order to recognize this part of me now."
For victims, as well
as for offenders, this involves not only retelling their stories, but
transforming these stories of humiliation and shame into stories of dignity
and courage. This process has a public, as well as a private, dimension.
That's why Judith Lewis Herman, in her seminal book Trauma and Recovery,
prefers the term "testimony." Stories are shaped in the telling
and retelling; they need compassionate listeners to hear and to validate
their "truths."
Meaning and Healing
I suspect that there
is another layer to this as well. Ellen Halbert was brutally attacked
in her bedroom by an enraged man in a Ninja suit who had hidden in her
attic all night. When I interviewed her recently, she tied the sense of
shame felt by victims to the fingers of blame pointed, not only by others,
but by oneself. Recovery involves a search for meaning set in stories
of resilience, validated by others.
Several years ago,
I completed a book based on interviews with and photographs of men and
women who were serving actual life sentences as a result of having participated
in the taking of a life. More recently, I worked on a similar project
with survivors of severe violence. My dialogues with those who have offended
and those who have been offended against have convinced me that issues
of belongingof connection and disconnectionare intimately
related to the causes of trauma and also to the transcendence of trauma.
A core element of trauma is disconnection and the road to transcendence
of this trauma is through re-connection.
Whether we have victimized
or have been victimized, the journey from brokenness and isolation to
transcendence and belonging requires us to re-narrate our stories so that
they are no longer just about shame and humiliation, but ultimately about
dignity and triumph. Questions of meaning, honor and responsibility are
all part of the healing journey. The process of justice can contribute
to or detract from this "Journey to Belonging."
Adapted
from Journey to Belonging, a paper delivered at the international conference
Just Peace? Peace Making and Peacebuilding for the New Millenium, Massey
University, Albany, New Zealand, April 24-28, 2000. If you would like
to read the original paper, it is available for the cost of copying and
postage at www.converge.org.nz/pma/a100500.htm
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