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Judaism

Turning the other cheek can be a Jewish value, too

Forgiveness can help heal the wounds of the past

September 20, 2022 16:36
Forgiveness
Street sign illustrating the concept of Forgiveness versus Revenge.
3 min read

The philosopher Jacques Derrida once said, ‘’There is only forgiveness, if there is any, where there is the unforgivable.’’

The broad strain of Jewish tradition, treading the narrow tightrope between both justice on the one hand and mercy on the other, would tend to disagree. Simon Wiesenthal’s famous book, The Sunflower, is an important case in point. It details the confession of a former Nazi officer who, on his deathbed, begs for Weisenthal’s forgiveness for the hundreds of Jewish families who were murdered on his command.

The famous Nazi hunter refuses on the basis that if any forgiving is to be done, it is the victims who have the power to grant it. To do otherwise would be to usurp the divine prerogative and that is not in Weisenthal’s power. 

Perhaps the refusal to forgive can be the righteous thing to do, even the morally appropriate course of action. Archbishop Desmond Tutu recounted an example from the South African Truth Commission in which a black woman testified. Her husband had been tortured and then killed by the police. As she said, ‘’A commission or a government cannot forgive. Only I eventually could do it. And I am not ready to forgive.’’