Apologies, Power and Justice
Ideas of restitution and reconciliation have been on my mind alot lately. One of the main reasons for this, is the possibility that the long-standing, shameful issue of War Reparations for Chamorros may soon be resolved. In January, Congresswoman Bordallo resubmitted the Guam World War II Loyalty Recognition Act (giya Guahan mafa'na'an este "War Reparations"), and it was passed by the House in February. At present its in committee in the Senate, and since the Democrats hold a clear majority now and Barack Obama was on record as a presidential candidate supporting the bill's passage, it looks like it might actually get throught his time.
For Chamorro activists, this is one of the issues which is often used to inflame people, to try and coax them into being more critical about the United States and its treatment of Guam and influence over Guam. The War Reparations issue is something that can drive even older Chamorros, those who experienced World War II, into anti-American tirades. The war, left many many wounds, physical, cultural, mental and emotional, and the war reparations issue is taken so seriously, because it appears to provide some closure for so many things that Chamorros may have been upset about, may have truly hated the United States about, but could not. Despite the fact that they could not articulate their distrust or their anger, it still persisted, and War Reparations appears to provide one avenue in which those wounds can be healed, or those angry demons can be laid to rest. Chamorros lost their island, lost their culture, lost land, lost language because of that war, although on some of these issues Chamorros played a large role in facilitating those losses, the United States was a culprit as well. But if you cannot confront the United States on those issues, if you aren't willing to become an activist, protest to get your land back, or aggressively pursue an agenda of decolonization, War Reparations can be the perfect sort of replacement. You receive recognition, you receive some compensation. It is not what caused your trauma, it does not heal your trauma, but it is something that you can point to to help you move past it, or help you articulate the way you owned or defeated your trauma.
All of this was in my mind when I was attending the Indigenous Studies Engages Ethnic Studies symposium that I spoke at earlier today. There was one presentation in particular today that stuck out in my mind as I considered the War Reparations issue, it was titled "Lost between memorialising and forgetting: a reflection upon the recent trend towards apologies made by modern settler States to Indigenous peoples," and given by Mark Harris, who teaches at La Trobe University in Australia, and sometimes teaches classes in my department at UCSD. In his presentation he outlined in broad strokes official apologies that have been made in recent decades by governments and large organizations, and in particular discussed two apology gestures by the Australian government since the 1990's to Australia's aboriginal people.
But like all national apologies of this nature, to indigenous people that have been colonized, had their land taken, been the victims of genocide or had their governments overthrown, there always seems to be a poisonous intent at work. The apologetic tone, the openess, the earnestness of these gestures is a spectacle meant to infer that they are broader, grander and most justice-orientated gestures than they actually are. The image of a head of state bowing symbolically or metaphorically beneath those the state has damaged or traumatized and requesting their forgiveness is a bit deceiving. It gives the impression of something truly unique or benevolent happening, history being made, justice being done or something incredible taking place. But in general, as was seen in the Australian stolen generation apology, and in the recent decision by the Supreme Court of the US over the 1993 apology to Native Hawaiians, these apologies are more spectacle than anything else. Merely shifts at the rhetorical level to appear more benevolent or inclusive, but do not really open any route to justice. The spectacle is meant to infer that the state or the government is willing to right a historical wrong, when in reality the apology is generally meant to close off a chapter of history, and to keep the traumatic questions and injustices of the past beyond any chance of restitution or reparation.
The blessed gift of the founding fathers is my gift as an American, so is America's history of liberating and saving the world, I continue their grand legacy, I can take credit for it as an American and claim that rich and exceptional heritage. The legacies of slavery, genocide, imperialism, colonialism, those all belong to people who are dead and gone. They certainly aren't mine. Ti iyo-ku enao siha. Manmatai todu esta i manggaiisao. In the United States for instance, there is no law that says that white is better or white people are better. But centuries of slavery and discrimination build up, and can't be overcome with the election of a black president or the celebration of the first nomination of an Asian American to the Supreme Court. An entire nation became rich off of genocide, the taking of massive amounts of land and the use of slave labor, and all Americans (of any color) today benefit from that historical fact. So as a nation, the United States and all its people do owe particular groups a chance at justice for those wrongs. But there are those who benefit in particular from that history, those for whom specific privileges or powers have emerged, and they are the ones whom resist reparations the most, because frankly its not in their best interest at all to revisit that past which has given them so much by taking from so many others.
There are two basic ways in which an apology of this sort functions.
First off, we should all come to an agreement that justice is always impossible. But that in no way means that when violent acts or oppression, aggression or colonization take place, that simply because what is lost or killed or banished can never authentically be replaced, or the clock turned back, that nothing should or can be done. Justice is all about what happens to the power or the privilege that has been built up taking that sin as its foundation.
Thus an apology can function as a gesture which closes off that foundation. An act meant to take the place of any further action. By apologizing for those things I seal myself off from any further demands, any further criticizes. I take verbal responsibility, I put up a big show of how I feel terrible, but I only do this so you can't ask for anything else. My apology is therefore a forcefield, to keep my ill-gotten gains. If you think about this from the perspective of a fighting couple, you apology for something so that it never needs to be mentioned again. You apology in order to move on, to try and keep the other person from remembering what happened or asking that you do something to make up for what has happened.
This of course naturally brings us to the second function of an apology, which is, if justice is the intent, to open up the foundation built upon that violent injustice, and to pave the way through which a process of restitution and reparations beyond simply saying "despensa yu'" or "I'm sorry." In the previous version, an apology is meant to make that foundation, to make that source of power impenetrable, to keep it from being attacked or keep it from giving anything up that it feels it owns. This type of apology though is offered to make that foundation vulnerable, to admit that something terrible happened and we must correct it somehow, even if it means we who have profited, we who have benefited from that injustice, have to give up something in the process. In the example of a relationship, this type of apology is the one which comes with presents attached. If you fight with a friend, it could mean letting him punch you and hit you to get you back for what you've done. In a partnership it could mean giving up something to show that you truly are sorry.
Obviously one is far more relevant to justice and to actually apologizing for something, or providing the means for getting past a foundational trauma, but naturally communities or privilege and governments tend to act in their selfish interest and operate based on fantasies that if you ever gave an inch, then all the natives would take their land back. But that is precisely what justice, not in the criminal justice system sense, entails. It is about giving more than you feel you can. It is about shocking your system, rocking it and leaving it open for critique or for judgement because of someone that has been wronged in your name, on your behalf, even if you weren't the one doing the slaughtering or the whipping. This is why justice is about the most debilitating form of gineftao or generosity.
Outside of the Parliament House in Canberra where Kevin Rudd gave his apology speech to the stolen generation, a memorial of thousands of lit candles which spelled "Sorry is the First Step" was placed on the lawn. But this is always the issue with "sorrys" or with apologies, is it truly meant to be the first step or is it simply meant to be the last one?

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