Episode 18: The Paradox of Forgiveness

第18集:宽恕的悖论

Hidden Brain

社会科学

2016-01-26

18 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

After more than a decade of brutal civil war, perpetrators and victims attempted to find peace around bonfires across Sierra Leone. This week on Hidden Brain, a story about forgiving the unforgivable, and the cost of reconciliation.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • Thousands of children under the age of 15 have been directly involved in the conflict in Sierra Leone.

  • United nations refugee agency says it believes soldiers loyal to the former military regime are holding many civilians as hostages.

  • For more than a decade, the west african nation of Sierra Leone was ravaged by a brutal civil war.

  • The fighting was triggered by the refusal of the junta and the struggle for control of the west african nation.

  • Since last month's brutal rebel attack on the capital, free time children as young.

  • As seven were given machetes and machine guns and forced to become killers.

  • From systematic amputation of limbs to mass rape, murder and enslavement of the civilian.

  • Population, some election days are more momentous than others.

  • For example, today in Sierra Leone, the west african nation is attempting to elect a legitimate government after a decade of brutal civil war in the first multiparty election there in 25 years.

  • This is hidden brain.

  • I'm Shankar Vedantam.

  • Today we're talking about reconciliation.

  • Now, when we talk about forgiveness, we usually mean forgiving, minor violations.

  • It's one thing to forgive someone who says something offensive or steals your purse or accidentally crashes a car into yours.

  • But could you forgive a neighbor who kills your father or cuts off your hand?

  • Could you continue to live next door to that person?

  • Could you go back to being just neighbors?

  • I was always fascinated by this question of how we can restitch the fabric of society in the aftermath of war.

  • This is Andrela Dubey.

  • She's an assistant professor of political science and economics at New York University.