What is the origin of violence? In the present article I revisit my
childhood in a tough neighborhood and draw from my experience certain
conclusions about this origin. I also look into the essence and
function of justice, which should never degenerate into an
institutionalized form of vengeance.
Flashes of memory stream into my consciousness. They take me back
thirty years plus. I was a boy then, a newcomer to a poor and tough
neighborhood. My parents, of moderate means and daring to a fault, had
decided to move there after my father had accepted an editing job in
the federal government. They had taken a lease on a low-rent brick
house, which was also run-down, covered in filth, and littered with
trash. I do not mince my words: Previous tenants had been pigs that got
along with bugs and rats.
“The house has potential,” my mother had said to reassure me, seeing
that I was aghast at its sordid aspects. Its one redeeming feature,
besides its solid construction, was a large woody front yard,
neglected, allowed to become a large dumping ground, as weedy as it was
woody, but potentially attractive and pleasant, to be sure.
My mother was a hard worker with a great deal of stamina, creativity,
and tastefulness. She mastered the art of doing wonders with little
money. After three months of intense labor – which for the first week
involved a carpenter and two garbage collectors plus two dump trucks –
the house was transfigured, quite presentable, even nice, much to my
amazement. It now contrasted sharply, cuttingly, with the slums at the
rear of the house and on the left of it. On the right was a school and
at the front, across the street, was a nunnery on a large piece of
land. My parents had conveniently focused their attention on these
establishments, as if the good education and good disposition of their
teachers and sisters could shield us from the evils of the slums.
Needless to say, they did not. Violence was rampant in this neck of the
woods and I was elected punchbag with only one dissenting vote: mine!
At the root of this violence was malevolence, which grows from
resentment, after one has been subjected to mistreatment. As much as my
family projected an image of distinction, the neighborhood boys were
malevolent and violent toward me. To them this image of distinction was
an act of humiliation; their feelings were hurt and it was natural for
them to hurt me. Of course it is a lot worthier to elevate oneself than
to abase someone else. It is also a lot harder, and nature
spontaneously levels everything the easy way. Moral excellence relates
to culture, is an acquired trait, by virtue of which a human is
courageous and just, worthy of praise.
One winter evening, I was crossing the field next to the rink where I
had played hockey, when a gang of hoodlums encircled me like a pack of
wolves. There were six of them, one of whom – a weakling who always
relied on others to feel powerful – lived three doors down, east of my
house, across the back street. The leader stepped forward and turned
around with a snicker. “Hey shithead, come and kiss my ass.” I was
tempted to kick it, not kiss it. “No thanks. Please let me go; I don’t
care for trouble.” As I was finishing my sentence, one of the boys
lunged toward me from behind and shoved me forward. I dropped my hockey
equipment and braced myself to fight and suffer. I was big for my age,
but big is small when outnumbered by six to one.
Again the leader took the initiative; the fight was on. With several
thrusts, punches, and kicks, I repelled my assailants momentarily,
until I was knocked and wrestled to the ground. Fists and feet hit me
everywhere, nonstop, from all directions. Suddenly I heard a menacing
shout and everyone slipped in a last blow before fleeing. A brave and
kind man had caught sight of their misdeed and chosen to intervene,
armed with a hockey stick. I was hurt but saved.
A few days later, still aching all over, I saw the weakling, alone by
his house – his hovel to be exact, which was covered with old imitation
brick, torn in places, and infested with cockroaches, rats, and
woodworms. His face was bruised and wet from weeping, as he screamed
with rage, “Fucking bastard, fucking bitch, fucking life, fuck, fuck,
fuck!” My anger was now tempered with compassion. I unclenched my
fists, prompted by a desire to spare him. I could not demean myself to
add pain to his pain, already so excessive that it overflowed in
streams of tears and curses.
His father was an illiterate and idle drunkard who collected welfare
and spent considerable time and money at the tavern. At home, slouching
in an armchair, he forever watched TV and drank beer or liquor. When
grossly intoxicated, he sometimes vomited before reaching the bathroom
and, without cleaning up his mess, fell unconscious on his bed, the
armchair, the floor, or wherever. He was also vulgar and brutal. He
often battered his son and his wife, and heaped insults on them.
His wife was an abusive and sluggish woman who had grown obese from
attempting to fill her inner void with chips, cookies, and pop. Day
after day she wore the same tattered nightgown and constantly found
reasons for bawling out her son and swiping him. She drove him insane,
then used this insanity as another reason for persecuting him.
These two loathsome and pitiful parents rendered his life at home
unbearable. He usually roamed the streets with fellow-sufferers from
similar – miserable and violent – backgrounds. Together they ganged up
and took their resentment out on other kids such as me. My aggressors,
first, were victims.
My insight into the origin of violence came to me at that time and has
never left me. I saw then and still see a victim in every aggressor.
Some say there is such a thing as gratuitous violence, committed by
individuals whose youth was favorable to all appearances. Violence for
the sake of violence, an exercise in brutality at the expense of
others, without provocation, past or present? I beg to differ.
Appearances are not a valid means of assessing someone’s youth, whose
favorableness or unfavorableness is a subjective, not objective,
matter. Circumstances have no value in themselves, but in relation to
people who consider them favorably or not. Attitude is here the only
relevant concept. Also, brutality cannot be exercised at the expense of
others unless these others are viewed heartlessly as expendable. This
heartlessness is greatly suspicious, unlikely to belong to someone who
regards humans with favor, thanks to a feeling of solidarity, of mutual
benefit.
In my opinion, aggressiveness is triggered by hostility, without which
it is dormant: a mere potentiality incapable of harm. It may include an
abnormal sensitivity or intellect that intensifies or alters someone’s
perception of the environment. The fact remains hostility, as perceived
by someone who feels painfully antagonized and proportionally
victimized, is always a factor. Therefore, aggression cannot be
dissociated from victimization, not only that of the victims but also
that of the aggressors. These aggressors are victims of their sick
minds or of the ill treatment they have endured. They deserve
compassion, besides indignation.
They are liable to a punishment that ought to be effective and
exemplary, not vengeful. Vengeance and violence are one and the same
thing. Both are resentful and harmful. Both are reprehensible. The harm
inflicted does not remedy the harm suffered; it simply compounds one
harm with another, and invites yet another harm. It lengthens the chain
of savagery from x (a frightening number of savage links) to x+1,
potentially +2, +3, +4, etc., instead of breaking it and helping to
free humanity from it. There is no worse slavery than savagery. The
best course is to make every effort to get over a wrong and forgive it,
while bringing the wrongdoer to justice.
In sum, justice should not serve to avenge people. It should serve to
prevent crime and protect the public, by intimidating or incarcerating
those who are a menace to others except under threat or behind bars. It
should never push the severity of this mandate to the point of cruelty,
in which case it would be a perversion of justice, an ominous sign of
barbarity. On the contrary, it should be a jewel in the crown of
civilization and foreshadow the coming of a better humanity, more
consistent with its true nature and purpose – in a word, more humane.
The difference between severity and cruelty is radical yet subtle; it
must be emphasized. Cruel law enforcers delight in the punishments they
inflict and readily overstep the mark. They are vicious and
blameworthy, like the criminals they punish. Law enforcers who are
severe, but not cruel, administer punishments reluctantly or regard
them as a necessary evil they would gladly forgo if they could. They
deplore the criminal element in society and strive to neutralize it
through intimidation, or incarceration as a last resort, and preferably
through reformation, a fundamental change of the criminal mind for the
better. Their ideal, as unattainable as it is elevated, is the
supremacy of justice without the institution of justice: no threats, no
prisons, only people who deeply understand and freely exercise the
principle of justice.
Impossible as this supremacy is, it is usefully pursued. The
institution of justice can become less and less necessary for the
manifestation of justice, which can become more and more customary.
This progress depends on the wisdom and willpower of its proponents who
make it their duty to educate, assist, and encourage potential
followers. It also presupposes that these potential followers take an
active part in this endeavor. They cannot be actual followers unless
they welcome this education, assistance, and encouragement, and display
intelligence and determination of their own.
How much can we collectively be civilized – that is, mutually
respectful and helpful, in the knowledge that this high goal can unite
our wills toward a common good of colossal proportions? In other words,
what is the ceiling of our possible civilization, which implies
responsibility and solidarity, an elevation of life to love? Nobody
knows the limit, so none should be set but the sky!
Generally, in a loving environment, human beings show humanity as
naturally as fruit trees give fruit in the summer. Love is to these
beings as sunshine is to these trees. It helps them grow into what they
are meant to grow into (unless their nature is flawed from the start,
which is an exception to the rule): beautiful and bountiful creations,
as opposed to ugly and puny aberrations. Yet, beware of love; it can be
possessive and manipulative, selfish and devilish! Yes, some angels
have horns, unnoticeable at first sight under their pretty hair; their
paradise is hell.
True love is in the image of God (by God I simply mean the fundamental
cause of everything. It brings us into existence and, within the limits
of its might, supports us in our quest for fulfillment). It is a desire
to nurture, not to capture. Under its divine rule, one always has the
other’s best interests at heart. No one, however, should be supportive
to the point of being an accomplice in someone’s oppressive or
destructive acts of egocentricity, folly, or injustice. These evils
should not be loved and served; they should be hated and combated.
Hate is legitimate toward them, whereas the people who embody them are
worthy of love because they exceed them by their ability to do good.
They are indeed greater than the sum of their evil ways; they include
the power to improve them. Therefore hate is directed at these ways,
and love at this power: It promotes the people’s ability to do good.
What if a person who is oppressively or destructively egocentric,
foolish, or unjust never responds to this love? In that case it is lost
and the life of this person shamefully amounts to a waste of soul.
By a stroke of luck, my parents were bright and warm people who helped
me blossom into a joyful and respectful individual. Their love was true
and so was the love of many others who took part in my life. I was also
lucky enough to be a good seed. I was a strong and healthy boy,
extremely lively and moderately clever, cheery and gentle-natured,
though impatient and self-assertive. In my eyes, until my family moved
to the poor and tough neighborhood, civility was the norm among the
members of society; it made sense. Barbarity, on the other hand, was a
stupefying rarity. The abused weakling gave me an understanding of
barbarity – which was common in this neighborhood – and replaced my
stupefaction with commiseration.