Buddhist Dreams of
Justice
Buddhistdoor International 2015-04-30
Buddhists believe in the infinite value of every sentient life.
Human beings, while not blessed with divine authority over other
living creatures, are uniquely equipped to attain enlightenment and
achieve the fullest sense of happiness and freedom for themselves
and others. Yet there exist crimes of such gross magnitude that
they seem to call our very sense of decency into question. We are
forced to confront how deeds of “inhumanity” are often all too
human, things that only human beings are capable of. We seek
justice as a natural response to these crimes. But these events,
dark as they are, challenge us to reflect on how we can apply right
intention to the application of justice itself.
Take the case of a recently smashed pedophile ring, whose seven
convicted members hid their criminality behind respectable careers
and families across Britain. The details of the crimes are too vile
and repugnant to share here. Suffice to say that Graham Gardner,
deputy director of investigations at the National Crime Agency,
told the press: “This is serious organized crime at its worst. . .
. The depravity of these men . . . is without doubt as vile as we
have seen.” In a similar vein, Zen master Thich Nhat Hanh wrote a
poem called
Please Call Me by My True Names
in response to the letter of a 12-year-old girl who was raped at
sea by a pirate and subsequently drowned herself. He famously
commented how although we would immediately sympathize with the
girl, we would naturally despise the pirate.
Pedophiles and rapists are surely people that have at some point
elicited our deep, primal urge for retributive justice. In many
countries, crimes of such severity, alongside murder, could warrant
the ultimate manifestation of retributive justice: the taking of
the criminal’s life. There are immensely complex socio-political
and cultural reasons why many countries, some of them dominated by
the Buddhist religion, retain the death penalty. It is also true
that a single ideology, theory, or philosophy cannot resolve the
diverse conditions that sustain the death penalty as the law of the
land in many regions.
But the content of Buddhism is not simply a philosophy, a body of
theories, or even a complex psychological and ethical system. It is
the transmitted embodiment of the Buddha’s message and of the
Buddha himself. There are no secular systems, even those of the
mighty state, that can compromise, co-opt, or invert the message of
interconnectedness, wisdom, and compassion that the Buddha revealed
in his sacred texts (of all traditions—Theravada, Mahayana, and
Vajrayana). These insights allow his disciples some understanding
as to why Buddhism would oppose the death penalty.
Buddhist exegetes, activists, and philosophers have come a long way
in addressing modern concerns like human rights, social and
economic justice, and theories driving international debate about
human societies. Indonesia’s execution of eight of the “Bali Nine”
(a troupe of outbound heroin smugglers arrested in 2005) on 29
April and the furious debate about rehabilitation, drugs, and
leniency that is taking place in Australia provide further reasons
to urgently reflect on Buddhist theories of criminal justice. When
we consider the “dichotomy” between retributive and restorative
justice, we find why the Buddhadharma is, at least doctrinally,
uncomfortable with a retributive vision of justice when it comes to
the death penalty.
Retributive justice sees crime as “a violation of the state and is
defined by law breaking and guilt” (Zehr 1990, 181). According to
this concept, the justice system must determine blame and mete out
suffering in a contest between the offender and the state based on
a system of rules. It aims to balance the harm done to the victim
by inflicting punitive harm on the wrongdoer. This is an
“adversarial” concept of relations between perceived entities, such
as the individual versus the state or the offender versus the
victim. In the most serious of offences, the state cannot suffer
the individual to exist and therefore passes on the death
sentence.
At the basic doctrinal level, the death penalty creates horrific
karma for the unenlightened person administering the lethal
injection or operating the electric chair. Only an advanced
bodhisattva with clairvoyance can claim to end someone’s life with
pure and compassionate intention. Foretelling a would-be murderer’s
rampage and slaying him was how the Buddha, in a former life as a
ship captain, prevented the deaths of his ship’s crew and prevented
that would-be killer’s eons-long torment in hell. Yet this scenario
effectively does not exist as we know of few advanced bodhisattvas
in the world. The act of killing also deprives the offender of the
chance the Buddha once gave the mass-murderer Angulimala: to make
the most of his remaining life as a repentant disciple of
peace.
Retributive justice emphasizes individual responsibility. Buddhism
certainly agrees that moral determinism is false and fatal.
However, retributive justice does not take into account the
innumerable karmic conditions, often from distant past lives that
have played a part in conditioning a person’s unskillful and
destructive actions in their present life. In
Please Call Me by My True Names,
Thich Nhat Hanh explored how a crime cannot be isolated from its
wider context of alienation, hardship, violence, and unskillful
thoughts. Samsara is a state of suffering. Thus wrote the Zen
master: “I am the mayfly metamorphosing on the surface of the
river, and I am the bird which, when spring comes, arrives in
time to eat the mayfly. . . . Please call me by my true
names, so I can hear all my cries and laughs at once, so
I can see that my joy and pain are one.”
In the relatively new concept of restorative justice, crime is
framed as a violation of people and relationships. It “creates
obligations to make things right. Justice involves the victim, the
offender, and the community in a search for solutions which promote
repair, reconciliation, and reassurance” (Zehr 1990,
181).Restorative justice focuses not just on the harm done to the
offended party, but also on how the offender can transform and be
freed from both inner and outer negative influences. It is mindful
of how wrongdoers themselves were wounded by childhood abuse,
poverty, racism, and other ills, and seeks to “balance the healing
of the wounds in the wrongdoer with insistence upon accountability,
which is a necessary element in that healing” (King 2005, 238). The
offender is not excused from penance. Restorative justice
prioritizes healing the harm to the victim, and that means
compensation and repentance on the part of the offender.
Restorative justice is therefore closely enmeshed with the
principles and strategies of victims’ rights movements (King 2005,
239).
This vision of justice ameliorates the prominence of both the self
and the adversarial state of the various relationships seen in
retributive justice. It is perhaps more in line with the Buddhist
teachings of interconnectedness and interrelationship. If Buddhist
visions of justice do indeed lean toward restorative preferences,
then it becomes clear how the death penalty seems doubly
unproductive and immoral.
Engaged Buddhists of all stripes, from Thich Nhat Hanh to Maha
Ghosananda, have proved that criminal justice and the death penalty
need a comprehensive framework of hermeneutics and exegesis so that
a more sophisticated level of thought can be applied to the problem
of retribution versus restoration.