By Father Jim Consedine
Sometimes I wonder whether as a
culture we are not obsessed with street crime and its effects. The
first television news broadcast I saw when I arrived in the United
States commenced with four "street crime" crime stories. One was an
arrest for murder, while the other three were stories of assaults.
Only after reporting these events, did the newscast move on to the
chaos in East Timor and the earthquake in Mexico. We need to
reassess our understanding of crime and ask why it is that corporate
crime and governmental crime advance virtually unhindered, while
localized "street crime" has become so central to so many. The
answer lies somewhere in the mixed realm of our own hidden fears and
our sense of powerlessness in the face of crime, and the immense
power of corporate vested interests who gain so much from the
current situation, and who control so much of what we view and
read.
Corporate crime is endemic the world
over. It hits us in so many ways from the added on costs in our
supermarkets to the pollutants in the air we breathe, from the
hidden cost of our banking and financial systems to the costs of
medicines we take for our illnesses. The tentacles of corporate
crime touch all these areas and many more. For example, through
false and misleading advertising, just one tobacco company arguably
kills and injures more people than all the street thugs put
together. The New York Times claimed in a recent editorial
(9/23/99) "that 400,000 Americans die annually from tobacco". We can
assume that Third World tobacco deaths would double that figure.
This could be as many as one million deaths per year. Is this not
huge global crime? Are not many of these deaths preventable
homicides? Will anyone go to prison for them? Not likely.
In Canada that same week, five
companies in a world bulk vitamin cartel pleaded guilty to rigging
Canadian markets over a period of years. They artificially inflated
by up to 30% the price of bread, cereals, milk and other products.
This theft cost every Canadian an average of $10.00. The guilty
companies were fined $88 million. This is probably one fifth of the
profits accrued in that time. No one went to prison; yet they stole
from several million people.
The World Bank has estimated that over
one billion workers in Third World countries live on an income of
less than one dollar per day. (World Bank Development Report,
1995.) We are all complicit in this sin, because we know that
such starvation wages enable you and I to benefit by buying their
products for ridiculously low prices, at the same time as we put
huge profits into corporate coffers. This is huge criminal offending
against one sixth of the world's population and their families. Does
anyone eve get charged with criminal offending for stealing from
such workers? Never. Does anyone ever go to prison? Never. Am I
truly my brother and sister's keeper? Not really, it seems.
Many of these cases of corporate and
governmental crime are perfectly legal, but fail every test of
morality that seeks to promote justice and protect the Common Good.
Too often ever increasing profit is the sole criteria for corporate
policies. The rights of workers and their families and the needs of
the wider community for gainful employment are ignored. As
corporations focus on cheap labor markets and build in economic tax
free zones, there is no sense of solidarity, little protection of
human rights, and the poor are the disposable fodder used to make
even more money for an already rich elite. Such reprehensible
behavior is not just spiritually bankrupt but is totally immoral
according to God's law and the Church's social teaching. It is
sinful. It clearly constitutes massive crime and exploitation
against hundreds of thousands of workers. But most of it is
perfectly legal. Such is the gap so often between law and
morality.
The Iraqi people continue to be
punished by the U.S. Government and its allies for a war that was
not of their making. The sanctions, which inflict malnutrition,
disease and death on tens of thousands of children and poor families
every year, may be legal, but they are highly immoral. Will any
government officials ever be charged over such genocidal criminal
behavior? Of course not.
The point I am making is that crime is
far bigger and more pervasive than we normally perceive. There are
huge crimes committed at the governmental and corporate levels, but
it is on the street level crime that the media and the wider public
generally focus their attention. It is for street level crime that
prisons are built. With rare exceptions, it is for the street level
crime that the vast apparatus of the criminal prosecution system is
primarily employed. It is time we started asking ourselves why this
is so. Are the corporate agenda and the power of money so strong
that even the legal system (one of our most sacred societal
structures) has now become primarily a puppet in their hands? More
and more people are now saying "yes" to this understanding. They are
seeing that it is usually only the poor who are going to prison and
it is for the poor that new prisons are being built.
Because of this wider picture of
crime, I wish to speak today not just of restorative justice, but of
the need to recognize transformative justice processes as well.
Restorative justice has huge strengths, but some limitations.
Transformative justice has less. I choose this language advisedly.
God's justice, as revealed in the sacred scriptures and as defined
by the Church in its teachings on the Common Good and other matters,
cannot always be achieved fully if one deals only with the immediate
matter of a specific offense. For example, if someone offends
through burglary who comes from a background of inter-generational
abuse, alcoholism, drug addiction, violence, poverty, and
unemployment, how much justice is achieved through a victim-offender
or restorative justice facilitated conference? Transformative
justice looks more closely at the background circumstances of the
lives of those involved and seeks to redress some of the injustices
existing there. It also recognizes the existence of governmental and
corporate crime. Both restorative and transformative justice can
provide imaginative and creative processes. Neither is a panacea for
all crime. Both will provide fairer justice for all, bring some
healing to victims, reduce re-offending, make communities safer and
reduce the numbers going to prison.
You should be aware that much of the
language of restorative justice has already been co-opted by vested
interests and given new meanings that subvert its huge potential to
bring about positive change. One must be very wary of groups with a
vested interest in taking control of the restorative justice
processes. Police, correctional officials, lawyers, and other
professional groupings should not be controlling these processes.
The restorative justice process rightfully belongs with the
community, not with the state. That is where the power rests in the
indigenous cultures where tribal conferencing has been a tradition
and where restorative justice is its goal. That is where it remained
until English law superceded it. The best results are achieved when
the restorative justice process is put into the hands of the people
closest to the conflicts to be resolved.
Let me make it clear that restorative
justice and transformative justice are not new., though modern
insights and skills can be extremely useful. They are as ancient as
the indigenous peoples of North America and Canada, as aged as the
original people who first roamed the mountains, hills and plains of
Mexico, as old as Abraham and Sarah in the bible. For when offending
happened in their communities, all of these people asked as the
primary question, not "How do we punish the offender?", but "How can
we fix things up?" This question forms the basis for restorative and
transformative justice.
By following a retributive model of
criminal justice based primarily on punishment and vengeance, the
world in the past two centuries has created a monster whose
pernicious effects are impacting everywhere. As social decay has
taken on a more marked appearance in recent years and the number of
poor has increased, imprisonment and harsher penalties have taken on
a fresh urgency in the minds of many politicians and with parts of
the wider public. Yet of all social policies, surely this is the
most failed. Never has any social system been so expensive and
failed so consistently as has the system of criminal justice and
imprisonment we adhere to so slavishly. Where has it ever worked?
Never has any tax dollar been less scrutinized for its fruitfulness
than the criminal justice dollar.
With the advent of the global economy
and the development of private prisons, the prison-industrial
complex has emerged worldwide as a major development in the past 20
years. This is frightening, because a combination of bureaucratic,
political and economic interests have been set in motion that
encourage increased spending on imprisoning people regardless of the
actual need or impact on the public weal. Crime rates may often be
falling and more effective alternatives to prison may be available,
but prison construction continues unabated. The prison-industrial
complex is built on a lure of big money and guaranteed jobs not
covered by the state's contracts with public employee unions. Its
raw material is the same everywhere: poor people, homeless people,
uneducated people, mentally ill people, people addicted to alcohol
and other drugs, and a wide range of other people who are socially
dysfunctional, sometimes psychotic, and occasionally violent.
Prisons are the dinosaurs of the modern
age. They fail on practically every front.
- Prisons fail to rehabilitate. Nearly eighty
percent (80%) of inmates re-offend again within a short time of
their release.
- Prisons are extremely expensive. Basically, it is
money wasted.
- Prisons smash family life and leave children minus a
parent.
- Prisons are spiritually bankrupt in that they
suppress the growth and freedom of people.
- Prisons help to create more crime by bonding
similarly minded rejected members of society.
- Prisons upgrade the anti-social techniques of their
graduates, which makes prisons the most successful tertiary
institutions in any country.
- Prisons breed violence and are the principal
recruitment locations for gangs.
- Prisons guarantee high rates of re-offending.
- Prisons punish the innocent especially the partners
and children.
Prisons fail in practically every
positive human indicator scale. As a 1993 Time magazine front
cover boldly proclaimed, "Each year jails take large numbers of
hopeless people and turn them into bitter, hopeless people." Yet we
keep building more. In terms of community usefulness and the
promotion of the Common Good, they are a systemic failure. The penal
system stands condemned by its own violence and unfairness. Indeed,
by its own inhumanity.
"Each year jails take large numbers of hopeless people
and turn them into bitter, hopeless
people."
There are unquestionably a "dangerous
few" who need to be kept out of circulation for the safety of both
themselves and the community. But these are only a small portion to
those currently incarcerated. They should be kept in humane
containment and encouraged to make constructive use of their time.
Otherwise, non-violent constructive alternatives should be used.
The Church's Response to Crime
Dealing with issues of crime and law
and order, the Church has to proclaim the age old message that Jesus
came to bring to the world: "Good news to the poor, liberty to the
captives, new sight to the blind, healing for the sick, and freedom
for the oppressed." That is our mandate. The teachings of Jesus can
bring new light to bear on the difficult issues of conflict and
crime in the community. His teachings offer grounding principles to
deal with such issues. They involve promoting processes based on
justice, equity, fairness and accountability. But such an approach
must always be guided by wisdom, tempered by mercy, and must allow
for the possibility of healing, forgiveness and reconciliation for
both the victim and the offender.
This is our Good News. To actively
promote these teachings and values is the only reason for the Church
to be involved in these areas. If Christian ministry and prison
chaplaincy are to have any validity, then they must offer something
different to what "the world" or "the system" offers. If we say with
Peter, "You are the Christ", then we are accepting the possibility
of the transformation of relationships and the redemption of "the
world", including the criminal justice system. By definition, this
means our ministry must be rooted in gospel truths. Only Christians
imbued with the Spirit of Christ will be able to see Christ in the
prisoner. It is the Christ in us that will see the Christ in them.
We should have no expectations that governments or bureaucracies
will see Christ in the prisoner. We have no reason to believe they
share much of our understanding of justice. All evidence is that
they do not. Our faith teaches that they won't. Hence the imperative
for prison ministry to be distinctive and hope filled.
Pope John Paul II, in his 1988
encyclical Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, wrote of the conditions
which prevail to produce what he called "structures of sin". He was
referring to social systems which enslave or oppress people and
attack the Common Good. These "structures of sin" are found where
people are crushed, marginalized or oppressed and are denied the
opportunity to develop their God given gifts. Can we not say that
the development of the modern prison-industrial complex is such a
"structure of sin"?
The recent International Commission of
Catholic Prison Pastoral Care Congress in Mexico City clearly
thought so. It noted with alarm that prisons, particularly private
prisons, now form an essential part of global economic development
strategies and are continuing to be built at an increasing rate,
despite the continuing decline in crime rates in many industrialized
countries including the United States. The Congress attended by 150
delegates from 55 countries and by officials from the Vatican,
described the prison-industrial complex as a "structure of sin" and
called for imprisonment to be used only as a "last resort". For many
this is a radical shift in focus and one that all need to study
carefully. Since the Australian, New Zealand and many European
bishops have been using similar language for more than 10 years, it
is obviously a shift that is becoming more and more part of
mainstream Catholic teaching.
This is a major advance in theological
thinking about imprisonment, but it is entirely consistent with the
Pope's analysis. How can we as Christians stand in solidarity with
the poor and their victims, speaking justice, development and peace,
when so many are being crushed by prisons? To take such an analysis
to its logical conclusion, do we not need to question the very
legitimacy of imprisonment itself? Locking grown adults into a 12'
by 8' cell for up to 23 hours a day, for months, or even years on
end, should be abhorrent to any caring person. It should be
particularly abhorrent to Christians. It runs contrary to
practically everything the Church teaches. Only the twisted could
regard such procedure as acceptable. Or those whose vested interests
bends their judgment.
[Editor's Note: While the size of the average cell
in New Zealand may be 96 square feet (12' by 8'), the cells in the
Baltimore City Detention Center, including those for two
prisoners, are about 53 square feet (7'9" by 6'10"). Thus, they are
slightly over half the size mentioned in the article.]
Sadly, many groups in the community
have a huge vested interest in maintaining the status quo,
regardless of how destructive the system might be. We need to
recognize that these vested interests do exist, and we need to name
them. We also must be aware that they have very effective propaganda
machines and a great deal of money is involved. The message of
Christ will not always be popular. But if the message of Christ is
that prisons are sinful, then the Church has a duty to be
unequivocal in its condemnation of such structures and to be
committed in promoting alternative processes of criminal justice.
There is no alternative. Either we
sanction sin, or we offer grace.
There is a corollary. Does the Church
through its traditional chaplaincy services support and succor this
sinful system, or seek to transform it? Does prison ministry sit
snugly in the bosom of the prison system, or stand with a
distinctive transforming message? Are we being true to the teachings
of Christ and our professed faith, or are we being compromised?
These are not easy questions, but they are practical ones that need
to be answered.
I believe the dawn of a new
millennium is an ideal time for the Church to rethink and clarify
the underpinning morality upon which the criminal justice system
sits. We should re-examine its relationship to the law, the
increasing use of imprisonment as a response to crime and the role
that the Church itself and prison ministry should play.
Biblical Justice
Talking restorative justice recently
with members of para-militaries in the Falls and Shankhill Roads of
Belfast in Northern Ireland was a bit of a shock to me. They
remain at enmity with each other. They still don't even talk or mix
socially. No where within the social structures of Northern Ireland
have the hardliners of the two communities been able to make eye
contact or to hear one another's stories and to start to repair the
damage done by years of conflict. Yet their stories are so similar.
Their aspirations and dreams for their respective communities are
nearly identical. What separates them is their tribal histories and
their mind sets. What perpetuates that separation is a lack of
social structures where natural inter-change could occur.
Restorative justice processes enable
such meetings to happen. Guided by a skilled facilitator, people
with opposite views are encouraged to meet and share their stories.
And, like Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well, they learn from
one another. It is only when such stories are told and pain is
shared that healing can begin and love grow.
The same applies to crime. How much
anguish and pain could be healed if only criminal justice structures
were in place to enable healing and reconciliation to commence. How
much safer our society would be if instead of only having a hundred
courthouses pitting offenders against the state, we also had
hundreds of facilitated restorative justice gatherings each day --
with offenders meeting in conferences with their victims. Jesus
advised us to do just that. "Don't take your brother to court," he
said, "try and get it sorted first."
A paradigm shift in thinking
would first be required for most of us. We would need to shift from
being punishment focused to being primarily reparative oriented.
Such a shift in mind set should not be a major problem for most
Christians. The whole focus of biblical justice in the ancient
scriptures is not on punishment, but centers on maintaining the
covenant between God and the people, promoting social
justice as demanded by the prophets and seeking shalom.
Shalom means wholeness, fulfillment, health and well being, peace
and prosperity. Each requires that damage done by crime be repaired.
Punishment was always secondary to seeking to repair the harm done.
Shalom, Social Justice and the Covenant are the three most
central concepts of biblical law. In his seminal 1990 book on
restorative justice, Changing Lenses, Howard Zehr points out
(p. 133) that shalom is not just a peripheral theme of
Scripture, but a basic core belief from which God's vision and plan
for creation and the development of the human family flow. Hence,
notions of salvation, atonement, forgiveness and justice have their
roots in shalom.
Usually, "shalom" is translated in
English to mean "peace". That is an inadequate translation. Perry
Yoder [Shalom: the Bible's word for Salvation,
Justice and Peace, 1987, p. 130] gives three basic
dimensions to its meaning. They are (1) physical well being,
including adequate food, clothing, shelter and wealth, (2) a right
relationship between and among people, and (3) the acquisition of
virtue, especially honesty and moral integrity. The absence of
shalom means the absence of one or another of these features. There
is a flow-on of this concept in the New Testament where Christ's
life and teachings and eventually his death and resurrection
transform relationships between and among people, thus inaugurating
the New Creation, wherein shalom is lived by believers.
The great recorded biblical voices of
Jeremiah, Amos, Micah, Isaiah, Zephaniah and Ezekiel remind the
people that to remain blessed requires that they practice social
justice. These ancient prophets crystallize the centrality of
social justice as a prerequisite for God's continuing blessing. Time
and again they remind their listeners that God will not continue to
uphold the people if they refuse to practice justice, especially to
the poor, the needy, the oppressed and the marginalized. It is from
this understanding that the prophets are able to warn that the
entire nation is doomed, because some widows have been mistreated or
because the hungry have not been allowed to glean the fields. Not
only all the people but the land itself is caught up in sin and all
its consequences, for the meadows lie barren and the mountains quake
and the trees bear no fruit. For Israel, the fullest response to
crime was not the isolated punishment of an individual law-breaker,
but the repentance of the entire nation. It is the voice of prophets
down through the centuries to our own day. Without freedom and justice, there can be no
salvation.
The other major concept that has a
direct relationship with law and justice is that of covenant.
A covenant is a binding agreement between parties. There were
several in the Scriptures, starting with God and creation, God with
Abraham, Sarah and the newly created People of God, God with Moses
representing the people on Mount Sinai when the Ten Commandments
were given. The culminating covenant came with Jesus and the whole
of humanity at the Last Supper. This new covenant opened up for
humanity a new way of viewing things, of relating, of recognizing
the dignity of each person within the context of their community.
Crime was a violation of the covenant. It needed to be repaired.
Justice is tested by the outcome, as a
tree is tested by its fruit. In the biblical view, the test of
justice is not whether the right rules are applied in the right way.
The substance, not the procedure, defines justice. And how should
things come out? The litmus test is how the poor and the oppressed
are affected. In biblical times such justice was enacted on an
everyday basis in Jewish settlements. Citizens went to the city
gates to seek justice from the judges or elders who presided there
for this purpose. The whole focus for this "court" setting was to
find a solution for the aggrieved person. The judge was not
primarily the one who rewarded someone with money damages
(distributive justice). He was the one who created order and
restored what had been taken or destroyed.
In the New Testament, Jesus
specifically rejects the concept of "an eye for an eye" -- that
proportional response so abused by modern popular usage. "If anyone
hits you on the right cheek, offer him the other one as well. Give
him your coat and your tunic, walk two miles not one." (Matt. 5:38).
This is radical stuff -- and quite practical today if properly
understood. Jesus is asking for a generous response from those who
have been victimized by crime. He knows -- indeed God teaches --
that unless people take such an attitude, they will usually end up
becoming doubly victimized. The first time will be with the actual
crime. The second will be through the hurt, bitterness and feelings
of vengeance that can so easily poison a person's spirit if allowed
to germinate. These are wise teachings indeed.
Jesus teaches generosity of spirit
when it comes to dealing with crime. To the woman facing the death
penalty, he said simply "go and sin no more". Through the parable of
the farmer who hired day workers, Jesus reminded us again how God's
justice works. Each got paid at the end of the day what they needed
to feed their families, even though they had worked uneven hours. It
is a parable of restorative and transformative justice. Provide what
is needed.
Generosity of spirit is always at the
heart of the Gospel teaching on crime and victimization. Forgive
seventy-seven times seven. Surely that's too hard to do? Not so,
says Jesus. It's not easy, but it can be done. In effect, he teaches
us that if we don't attempt these very difficult matters then we run
the grave risk of being damaged spiritually.
Restorative justice options are not
easy. But they sit at the heart of the Cross and at the doorway to
the Empty Tomb. They are life giving. We short change ourselves and
our neighbor with anything less.
Towards the New Millennium
What then are some of the real
alternatives based on the justice and mercy of God as revealed in
Christian tradition? There are six that readily come to mind which,
if expanded and given proper resources, would reduce re-offending,
help offenders take responsibility for their behavior, produce
better more healing results for victims, offenders and the
community, make our communities healthier and safer and be much more
affordable.
- DIVERSION. The price of criminalizing so
many is something that needs to be looked at seriously. Even when
people have broken the law, who do they usually have to be
prosecuted and criminalized? What positive purpose does it serve?
In Japan, two thirds of all arrested people are diverted. They
never come to court. Other options involving apology and
restitution are taken. Diversion is a sign of maturity, of wisdom,
of imagination.
-
WELLNESS CENTERS. Following a 1989 report
of a government inquiry, the New Zealand Government established a
series of "wellness" or "habilitation" centers. Named from the
Latin root word "habilitare" [meaning to empower, to
enable], the concept is based on the premise that the vast
majority of offenders need to deal with their internal problems if
they are going to make useful crime-free futures for themselves.
Such problems as aggression, sexual aberration, and drug, gambling
or alcohol addiction often need to be addressed. It was recognized
that many offenders have never had an opportunity to undertake
this sort of development. The Commission of Inquiry recommended
that offenders sentenced to a custodial term be given the option
of going to prison or going to an habilitation (or "wellness")
center where they would have to face up to and deal with their
problems during their custodial term. It was felt that most
inmates need such an incentive to change. Engaging in habilitation
processes during their sentences, but away from the harsh prison
culture, was regarded as the best way forward.
-
VICTIM/OFFENDER FACILITATION and COMMUNITY
PANELS. The former is a well-tried process on both
sides of the Atlantic and involves a facilitated conference
between the immediate victim and the offender. It has its
limitations but can be very effective in some moderate and minor
cases of offending. Community panels using a restorative approach
can also be useful.
-
RESTORATIVE CONFERENCING. New Zealand for
the past 10 years has had mandatory conferencing for its juvenile
offenders. This process involves a meeting convened by a skilled
facilitator to which the victims and the offenders are invited.
Both are encouraged to bring family and friends in support. At the
conference, apology is given, explanations made as to why the
offense occurred and reparation discussed. The victims are
encouraged to express how it has been for them and have any
questions answered. It is important for them to be acknowledged,
to be offered an apology, to receive restitution, to experience
justice, to have basic fears allayed and to have questions
answered. Usually consensus is reached as to what to recommend to
the judge. The offender signs the contract. Judges accept 93% of
such contracts and most are fulfilled. No conviction is entered.
In 10 years the numbers of young offenders appearing before the
courts has dropped from 13,000 to 1,800. It is amazing how
contrite and shamed most young offenders are after hearing of the
effects of their actions on their victims. Most youth prisons and
detention centers have closed.
The secret of the New Zealand success lies in the "carrot
and stick" approach, which forms part of restorative philosophy. The
key to this is that all participants work out a recommended
conference plan to which all must agree if at all possible. This is
the incentive, the "carrot", which encourages offenders to come
forward and to take responsibility for what they have done. They get
the chance to participate in a reparative outcome. The principle
incentive for victims lies in the recognition and acknowledgement of
the pain and hurt they have experienced. They get to hear an apology
and to get answers to such questions as: "Why me?" and "Will it
happen again?". Under the current retributive system, victims get
virtually nothing.
-
TRANSFORMATIVE JUSTICE PROCESSES. These
include much of what is recommended in restorative conferencing,
but take into account wider background issues. These also
recognize that crime is far wider than is usually imagined and
that corporate and governmental crime is endemic across the world.
For all that, it recognizes "street crime" as important and that
the transformative conference creates an opportunity to address it
and wider related issues. These might include inter-generational
abuse, violence, addiction and poverty. They may look at the
resources available or otherwise in the community to help people,
the opportunities for employment and constructive living, the need
for the wider community to take some responsibility for its health
and well being. For example, if a town has only three bars and no
sports teams, no recreation center and no employment
opportunities, it is likely to have more alcohol related crime
than if it did have these facilities. The transformative process
can be a vehicle for community growth and development in ways that
will bring out the best qualities of many in the community. The
offending can be a trigger to convene such a gathering.
The key to successful conferences and change involves
participation and encounter between the parties. It is the
dynamics of the group, which provide the energy for the whole
process. Anything which impedes this basic movement reduces the
chances of real responsibility being taken by offenders, which in
turn inhibits the possibilities for real change and future
accountability. Within the actual conference itself and the
dynamics of it lie the greatest potential for real change and real
growth. This is why professionals other than the facilitator need
to take a back seat.
-
AMNESTY. With the advent of a Year of Jubilee in
the year 2000, it is appropriate at this time to speak of the
biblical injunction that Jubilee be celebrated by "proclaiming
liberty throughout the land." (Lev. 25) While there has
been a wonderful concentration on the abolition of Third World
debt, the idea of Jubilee was that people be given a fresh start.
Amnesty or pardon is a concept that should sit at the heart of
every Christian's life, since we have all been pardoned through
Christ. It is something the Church needs to proclaim clearly as
being part of her teaching. Jubilee recognized that from time to
time we need to step outside the usual laws governing society and
think laterally, so that compassion, justice and generosity could
be better practiced. To celebrate the year of Jubilee and honor
2000 years since the birth of Jesus, delegates to the recent World
Congress of prison chaplains held in Mexico City called for an
amnesty for as many prisoners as possible by releasing them or
shortening their sentences. This was to include all prison inmates
serving a sentence of 12 months or less, women inmates who have
dependent children, detainees seeking asylum and under aged
persons. Jesus warned us that if we do not forgive and pardon one
another, we can hardly expect pardon from God. This was a timely
reminder that the grace of Jubilee should be extended also to
people in prison.
Conclusion
The reality of the prison-industrial
complex is that it no longer is an acceptable structure because of
its violence, its ever widening expansion, its failure rate, its
expense and its detrimental effect on the incarcerated and their
families. Just as slavery, genital mutilation and public floggings
have been abolished over the past hundred years because people came
to see them as dehumanizing and violent processes, so imprisonment
needs to be abolished in the coming years. Now is the time to begin.
With more than eight million (8,000,000) people already imprisoned
around the world and the numbers set to accelerate over the next
decade, people of good will everywhere have to see that imprisonment
is unacceptable, a "structure of sin" in religious terms.
Only weak politicians and those who
profit monetarily from the prison industry, benefit from maintaining
this archaic system of punishment. Like the slave owners and their
political apologists of old, they must be confronted over their evil
exploitation of the poor, the weak, the uneducated, the vulnerable,
the mentally ill, the homeless, the hopeless, those addicted to
drugs and alcohol, the illegal immigrants, and the asylum seekers
who make up the bulk of the world's prison populations. None of
these people pose such a serious threat to the rest of society that
we are justified in stripping their liberty and dignity from
them.
If these facts are accurate and the
modern prison-industrial complex is "a structure of sin", then
logically the abolition of the prison system and the promotion of
alternatives to imprisonment including transformative and
restorative justice processes should be a mandatory part of the
Church's mission to the world.
There are unquestionably "a dangerous
few" who need to be kept out of circulation for the safety of both
themselves and the community. But these would need to be only a
small portion of those currently incarcerated. They should be kept
in safe humane containment and encouraged to make constructive use
of their time. Otherwise, non-violent constructive alternatives
should be used, which do not involve full-time deprivation of
liberty.
No longer should the abolition of
prisons be seen as a fringe movement. "The promotion of justice is
an essential part of preaching the gospel." (1971 World Synod of
Bishops) No longer should the Church and prison chaplains in any way
be seen to be supportive of this dehumanizing and sinful system.
Resurrected hope and God's grace and strong action by the Church
could bring about a necessary change in the mind set of the wider
public. It is with commitment to such power that the Church, its
prison ministries and indeed all Christians should witness.
Jim Consedineis a Catholic priest in Christchurch, New Zealand,
who is an internationally known and respected campaigner for
justice. He has been a prison chaplain for more than 20 years and is
the national coordinator of New Zealand's Restorative Justice
Network. He has had many papers published internationally on
economics, racism, criminal justice and spirituality. He is also the
author of A Poison in the Blood
Stream (1991) and
Restorative Justice: Healing
the Effects of Crime (1995,
1999). He also authored an article in Just Line
published by the Maryland
Justice Policy Institute.
His 1995 article entitled, New Zealand's Alternative System of Justice: The
Maori Restorative Tradition, (JL 95-2, page 1) described the
traditional Maori system of resolving conflicts.
Jim Consedine's two books on
Restorative Justice are now available in the United States from the
Catholic Worker Bookstore, Box 3087, Washington, DC, or call 1 800
43-PEACE. The books are:
Restorative Justice: Healing the
Effects of Crime (1995, 1999),
and
Restorative Justice: Contemporary
Themes and Practices (1999)
The price for each book is US $12.00 plus
postage.