Dean Brackley, S.J.
Higher Standards for Higher Education:
The Christian University and Solidarity
Universidad Centroamericana "José Simeón Cañas"
San Salvador
Ten years ago, in November of 1989, a commando unit of the
Salvadoran armed forces entered the campus of the Central American
University (UCA) and killed two women colleagues and six Jesuit
priests. The tenth anniversary of the UCA massacre offers us a rich
opportunity to continue our reflection on what a university must be for
the 21st century, especially a Christian, Catholic and Jesuit
university.
The murdered university president, Ignacio
Ellacuría, and those who shaped the UCA wanted a university at the
service of their country. They argued that this meant the "liberation
of the poor majorities". The UCA was to pursue its goal of service to
the poor, and to the nation, universitariamente, that is, by doing the
work proper to a university, not that of a church, a political party or
some other kind of organization. A university seeks the truth. The
objective of human liberation threw into sharp relief that the UCA was
to pursue the truth about la realidad nacional, the national reality.
The three instruments, or means, proper to the university in the
pursuit of this goal were to be the familiar two of teaching and
research and the less familiar one of proyección social. This last,
social projection, includes all those means by which the university
projects the truth it discovers directly into the social world outside
the campus in order to help shape social consciousness.
University
personnel carried out proyección social through public speaking and
appearances in the media, publications, the work of Segundo Montes’s
Human Rights Institute, Martín-Baró’s Institute for Public Opinion and
the Pastoral Center.
Projecting that truth into society
generated conflict. It meant unmasking the official lies. Under
conditions of mass injustice, violent repression and then civil war,
Ellacuría and others argued that proyección social was the most
important instrument by which the UCA was to realize its mission of
service. That was what led to the killings of November 1989.
We
cannot hope to photocopy the UCA in the U.S. Yet, we need to ask how we
can shape our universities to respond more faithfully, and
universitariamente, to an unjust world, in a manner analogous to what
the martyrs of the UCA did.
Several months after their deaths,
John Paul II published his exhortation on Catholic higher education, Ex
corde ecclesiae. It has stirred the old controversy over whether
Catholic identity threatens free inquiry. But the document also
challenges all in Catholic higher education to undertake teaching,
research and proyección social very much in the spirit of the UCA
martyrs. Of the Catholic university, it says that its
research activities will . . . include study of serious contemporary problems, such as the dignity of human life, the promotion of justice for all, the quality of personal and family life, the protection of the natural environment, the search for peace and political stability, a more equitable distribution of world resources and a new economic and political order that will better serve the human community at the national and international level. University research will have to be directed toward in-depth study of the roots and causes of the grave problems of our time . . . .
The document states that "The Christian spirit of service to others
in promoting social justice is especially important for each Catholic
university and should be shared by professors and fomented among
students." The university should help promote the development of the
impoverished whom Ellacuría called the crucified peoples of the world.
What
I propose to explore here is the difficult issue of educating for
justice, especially international justice, in these confusing times in
which we find ourselves.
Signs of the Times: The Bad News.
At
the turn of the millennium, we find it very hard to say where the world
is headed--whether economically, politically, socially, culturally or
intellectually. But one thing is certain.
We are finishing up
this century in bad shape. The U.N.’s 1999 Human Development Report
informs us that "The income gap between the fifth of the world’s people
living in the richest countries and the fifth in the poorest was 74 to
1 in 1997, up from 60 to 1 in 1990 and 30 to 1 in 1960." Inequality is
increasing everywhere, including the U.S. and Europe. Globally, more
than twice as many women are poor as men, and the division of rich and
poor is perhaps the single greatest cause of environmental destruction.
With the growing resource gap, U.N. documents speak of spreading crime
and violence and, in general, social disintegration. I witnessed that
disintegration in spades during the 80s in the South Bronx: the
crumbling of communities, families and egos. Since then we have been
witnessing a kind of globalization of the South Bronx and that
threefold crumbling. Governments and parties, left, right and center,
are suffering a global legitimation crisis. We don’t believe they can
eliminate poverty, save the environment, stop the violence or advance
the cause of human rights.
Hopeful Signs: Grassroots Movements in Civil Society.
What
is the good news? Who is advancing the cause of humanity? When I ask
people these questions, they answer: Amnesty International, the United
Nations, environmental groups, women’s groups, community groups. They
mention non-governmental organizations, NGOs. It was a coalition of
more than 1,300 NGOs who spearheaded the spectacular success of the
Land Mine Treaty and won the Nobel Peace Prize three years ago. These
groups of ordinary citizens carried off one of the most successful
humanitarian campaigns in history. Signs of the times.
In
Central America most of the ferment, and the locus of hope, is in civil
society. Like other poor regions, Central America is witness to the
steady growth of la sociedad civil: groups of neighbors, indigenous and
black people, environmental groups, unions, small and medium-sized
businesses, cooperatives, communal banks and consumers who are pushing
for change from the bottom up and across the base of society. Within
what have been traditional authoritarian societies, these movements
increasingly stress democratic participation, transparency and
accountability in their own internal organization.
These
movements hold great promise; and yet, they remain weak. In countries
like El Salvador, the micro-iniciatives run up against macro-obstacles.
If you directly challenge companies who are polluting the Acelhuate
River in San Salvador, they could find you floating face down in the
Acelhuate tomorrow morning. This means that environmental activists
need to link up with Greenpeace. The human rights office at the UCA is
working hard to end impunity of prominent public figures involved
organized crime and even murder. The director of the human rights
office is no fool. He makes good friends with human rights groups in
Washington and San José, Costa Rica. Groups of women, indigenous
peoples and unions connect with others locally and internationally.
Poor local communities link up with sister parishes and sister
communities in Europe and North America. Without international allies,
the fledgling groups of the sociedad civil have no chance against those
who control the market and the means of violence.
That seems to
be the pattern as we move into the next century. On the one hand, our
major institutions have entered into crisis and social disintegration
is spreading; and, on the other hand, non-governmental groups and
movements are sprouting up to combat social crumbling and are sowing
the seeds of a new social order. While fire rages among the tall pines,
new shoots are springing up on the forest floor. But, again, the local
micro-initiatives in poor and violent countries face macro-obstacles
and need international allies to survive.
The Century of International Solidarity?
This
situation leads me to suggest that we will have to make this new
century the Century of International Solidarity. The powerful of the
world are extending their power through globalized markets and
communications. The response from those who hope to advance the cause
of humanity can only be to globalize solidarity, that is, to globalize
the practice of love. It is not clear at this point just how to
organize more humane societies in this new century or how to get from
here to there. But one thing is certain. There will be no new societies
unless we have new human beings capable of identifying with the cause
of the world’s majorities. In the Ignatian spirit of tantum/quantum
rather than the consumer spirit, we will need to take advantage of the
new technology--internet, e-mail and discount air fares--and make them
channels of love and service instead of their opposites. But above all,
we need to concern ourselves with the formation of new human beings.
(Parenthetically,
the situation I described, suggests to me a general agenda for the next
phase of liberation theology which I expect to thrive well into the
next century. It suggests the need to reflect theologically on that
least-noticed "second meaning-level" of liberation which Gustavo
Gutiérrez described in his Theology of Liberation, the level of new
human relations, micropolitics or horizontal politics if you will, the
level of cultural revolution and democratic values, all of which
require new human beings.)
For our purposes, this is crucial. If
the micro-initiatives of the poor South are not to be crushed by the
macro-obstacles they face, that will depend, decisively, I think, on a
critical mass of people in the rich North capable of assuming the cause
of the poor as their own, and, indeed, as the cause of humanity, and
responding effectively. Although important strides have been made in
this direction, we are still a long way from the solidarity movement we
need to do battle for life in the 21st century.
Education for Solidarity: Higher Standards of Excellence.
Christian
universities and, above all, Jesuit universities in the U.S., are in a
position to play a signal role in the formation of a new generation of
international solidarity--not just people for others, but specifically
people for the crucified majorities in the poor countries of the world.
{{Some
might object that we have plenty of poor and suffering people here at
home and that charity begins at home. But let us not overextend a good
principle. We need to take suffering here with utmost seriousness,
certainly that of our poor inner-city neighborhoods and neglected rural
communities, but also the deep pain of the affluent suburbs and
anguished professional. At the same time we need to take very seriously
the way the suffering of the non-poor and their societies are
intimately related to the suffering of the poor and their societies.
{{The
real suffering of the affluent in this country is directly related to
the kind of society in which they live. It is in great part the
reflection of the suffering of the poor and unimportant people from
whom the non-poor distance themselves. In a similar way, the very grave
social problems of the U.S. are also related to the kind of society we
have constructed here which depends on the foreign policies which have
distanced us from the poor majorities of other nations and even
contributed to their misery.
{{That means that we need to become
reconciled with the poor majorities of the world to be healed of our
own internal divisions. In addition, as Christian, or simply
humanitarian citizens of this colossal world power, we have a special
responsibility toward the poor majorities of the world, to help remove
the crucified peoples of the world from their crosses, as Ellacuría put
it. There is a political dimension to this responsibility. We all
disagree with the U.S. teaching torture and the subversion of democracy
at the School of the Americas and all the sordid policies which our
government has carried out in poor countries. Many of us disagree with
skewed economic policies imposed by the U.S. and its allies through the
international lending agencies and the unfair trade practices imposed
on the poor nations. But it is not as simple as that. For these
policies are carried out in our name and with our tax dollars. We all
have different vocations, it is true, but here, silence and inaction
amount to a complicity unworthy of our deepest Christian and human
vocation.}}
These days more people recognize the importance of
promoting justice in the university. Kosovo, East Timor and the misery
of Africa are topics for study in the classroom. Debates over
affirmative action, the virtues and vices of the market, U.S. policy in
Latin America and foreign debt take place in the student cafeteria and
the faculty lounge. A high percentage of students engage in service.
Some go to the Dominican Republic or Mexico and come back "ruined for
life". And yet, many feel that justice remains on the margin at the
university, that, even in the debates, a great deal of disinformation
frames what genuine information is discovered and shared. The agenda of
forming those enlightened and committed "new human beings" gets stalled
because of people’s limited experience, the requirements of the job
market, personal prejudice and institutional inertia. Is it wildly
utopian to expect more? I don´t think so.
Today not only the
signs of the times but the deepest needs of students and teachers
require that the Christian university reach beyond an excellent
"liberal" education--plus sacraments and pastoral attention. A truly
humanistic, Christian education demands more. First, of course, we want
to help students understand the world, la realidad mundial, and not
just "the literature" of their major fields (as important as that
obviously is). We want them to understand the world’s suffering and the
causes of that suffering, as well as possible solutions. But, in
addition, we want them to be morally prepared to change the world when
they leave the university.
This requires more than bare
intellectual training. It also requires moral conversion and
conscientization. The Christian university needs to take moral
conversion seriously, especially since intellectual formation itself
suffers without it. Intellectual training also suffers unless it
includes conscientization, by which I mean intellectual conversion, the
development of moral sensitivity to and awareness of suffering and its
causes. The holistic outlook on formation has a long history in the
Ignatian educational tradition.
Does this agenda threaten
academic excellence? No. These standards of excellence are much higher
than those of the Ivy League competition.
A frequent experience in El Salvador can throw the wider educational challenge into relief.
Encounter with the Victims.
Waves
of foreign delegations have come to El Salvador during recent years.
The pilgrims deplane a little anxious, vaguely dreading what awaits
them. They fear, half-consciously, that the people might lunge for
their wallets, or that when they, the visitors, arrive at their first
poor community, they will suffer a massive Irish-Catholic--or Jewish or
Methodist--guilt-attack; or at least that they will have to sell their
VCR when they get back home.
As happens with most of our fears,
it doesn't turn out that way. On the one hand, the visitors spend much
of their time in El Salvador wondering why these people are smiling.
The people are glad they came and receive them with open arms. On the
other hand, if the pilgrims listen to the stories of bombings and
flight from the army, death squads, hunger and premature death, the
victims will break their hearts. And that, after all, is the main
reason the pilgrims have come. It is an experience of extraordinary
richness, if the visitors can take it in.
The encounter stops
them short and focuses their attention. "My God!" they cry, "half their
children die from preventable disease. The powerful steal from them at
will. There is no justice. And what has my government done here in my
name?" The visitors are shocked. Not that the poor are all saints. They
just do not deserve what they have had to suffer. The injustice clashes
strikingly with their humanity.
This humanity, pressing upon
the visitors, can shake them to their roots. The more they allow the
poor to crash through their defenses, the more unsettled they feel.
They begin to see their own reflection in the eyes of their hosts, and
they say to themselves, "Hey, these people are just like us!" They
sense a gentle invitation to lay down the burden of their own
superiority (of which they are mostly unaware) and identify with these
humble people, despite the differences between them. They begin to feel
smaller and more "ordinary". The visitors feel themselves losing their
grip; or better, they feel the world losing its grip on them. What
world? The world made up of important people like them and unimportant
poor people like their hosts. "Things fall apart," as the poet says;
the visitors’ world is coming unhinged as the poor welcome them without
demanding that they clean up their act with their hosts and billions
like them. The northerners’ disorientation is like the sweet shame and
holy confusion of falling in love. In fact, that is what is happening,
a kind of falling in love. The earth trembles. Their horizon is opening
up. They’re entering unfamiliar ground, a richer, more real world.
In
this interchange, the anonymous masses of the world’s poor emerge from
their cardboard-cutout reality and take on the three-dimensional status
of full-fledged human beings.
This kind of encounter can blow
our world apart. It discloses that the world is far worse off than we
dared to imagine. But right there, the victims reveal that there is
also something going on in the world that is far more wonderful than we
dared to imagine. Sin indeed abounds, but grace abounds even more (Rom
5,20). When the victims share their last tortilla with a visiting
stranger, they pull back the veil on their hope, a hope they themselves
seldom fully understand. It seems we need to allow their suffering to
break our world apart in order for them to share with us the secret of
God’s transforming work in the world. Only then can we participate in
that smile of theirs which seemed to have so little basis in the facts.
My Middle-class Tribe.
I
belong to a peculiar tribe. The middle-class cultures of the North are
newcomers to world history and have only existed for about 200 years.
We're not all bad people; we’re just a tiny minority under the common
illusion that we are the center of gravity of the universe. The poor
can free us of this strange idea.
The middle-class cultures have
made extraordinary advances in civilization. True; historically, many
came at great cost to the despoiled nations and races. Nonetheless,
these are historic achievements. I'm not so much referring to the
ambiguous technological progress. I mean the spiritual, cultural and
political breakthroughs: the unheard-of opportunities, political
liberties, democracy, the critical consciousness of the Enlightenment,
and so on. The problem for the non-poor is that the new freedoms and
economic security have distanced us from the kind of daily
life-and-death struggle that has always been the daily fare of the.
Perhaps 90% of all the people who ever lived have struggled every day
to keep the household alive against the daily threat of hunger,
disease, accidents and violence. By distancing the non-poor from the
daily threat of death, the benefits of modernity have induced in us a
kind of chronic low-grade confusion about what is really important in
life, namely life itself and love. To make matters worse, our superior
technology and the media induce us to think of our culture and
perspective on life is the norm, basically on track.
The
encounter with the poor can free us from these illusions. When we come
out on the other side, we realize that the marginalized are really at
the center of things. It was we, in Chicago and Paris, who are on the
fringe. Clearly we need these victims--the poor, abused women and
children, racial and sexual minorities, prisoners--more than they need
us. They draw us out of ourselves and usher us into the heart of
reality. Like practically everybody, we live habitually on the
periphery of life’s deep drama--more so, on average, in affluent
societies. The reality of the periphery is thin, one-dimensional,
"lite," compared to the multi-layered richness of the center where life
struggles against death. The poor reveal to us both the horror of evil
in the world and the possibility for a more humane way of living
together. They bring us up against the world and ourselves all at once.
When the world’s pain crashes in upon us in the person of the victim,
the encounter dredges up from within us the parts of ourselves that we
had banished into unconscious exile. The outcast outside us calls forth
the outcast within.
We don’t have to go to El Salvador for
this. But, for all our courses and diplomas, can we really consider
ourselves educated people unless we allow the poor to break open our
world like this?
As I see it, experiences like this reveal
three lessons for humanistic education today: First, authentic
education requires cognitional hygiene, especially for my middle-class
tribe. It must challenge students to open their horizons and overcome
prejudices rooted in social conditioning. Second, books alone are not
enough for this. It requires engaging students at the level of
experience and practice in such a way as to challenge their
intellectual and moral commitments. In most cases this will provoke
wholesome crisis. Third, this raises new questions and helps students
to re-configure their world-view, re-locating important issues at the
center and de-centering less-important ones.
None of this means
less study or book-learning or rigor. It aims at greater intellectual
rigor by tackling the prejudice and limited horizons that undermine
intellectual authenticity. It raises the issues that send people to the
library and the classroom searching intently for answers. Our
best-intentioned professors frequently find themselves proposing the
justice answers to students who lack the questions.
I will say a word about each of the above three points: prejudice, liberating education and new world-views.
Resistance, Prejudice, Searching for Truth.
What
are the conditions for coming to know the truth about reality in a
pluralistic setting like a university? What can help us move the
debates forward? To answer that we need to confront the way
common-sense discourse, personal and institutional prejudice and social
conditioning stand between us and reality, and we need to ask how these
obstacles can be overcome.
I have found Ignatius Loyola a
helpful guide here. Ignatius understood people to be on a journey
either toward greater union with God and greater humanity, or away from
these. His passion was to help them advance on their journey. He would
locate the intellectual formation of members of the university
community within the wider framework of their personal journeys and
their journey together.
Along our journey, our intellect and
the way it functions is bound up with basic myths and assumptions,
symbols and myths with which we are committed. Our thinking is like the
branches of a bush, below which a network of roots extends deep into
the soil. If I can mix metaphors here, these assumptions and attitudes
establish the horizon of our experience, the framework in which I
interpret and evaluate data, and the questions that arise in my
experience. This framework is less the product of reason than of
interaction with my earliest family environment and the value-bearing
institutions of the society in which I was raised. So, I live in my
world. Everything at its center moves me. Everything on its periphery
leaves me cold.
My horizon helps me understand reality but it
also partly distorts reality, thanks to bias, blind spots and sheer
lack of experience, all of which I share to some extent with other
members of my class, race, sex and nation. So, searching for the truth
involves unmasking the falsehoods and half-truths, public and private,
that stand between us and reality.
As we follow the roots of
our conscious thinking deeper still, we discover that the basic
assumptions, symbols and myths are themselves rooted in past and
present commitments, in my desires and inclinations and, in the end, in
my identity. These have all be shaped and formed in social interaction,
so that my basic assumptions are embedded in the habits of my heart and
my identity itself. To question those assumptions is to question me and
to shake the foundations of my world. A whole army of thinkers has
helped us uncover the genesis and structure of this non-rational
sub-stratum of our conscious and rational life (Marx, Freud, Nietzsche,
pragmatism, the sociology of knowledge, Gadamer, and so on).
Christian
theology has always recognized a moral component to the problem of
intellectual bias. Scripture therefore scoffs at the foolish wisdom of
this world, of those who say they see but who are actually blind. But
theology rarely draws the necessary consequences for education. If we
really take sin seriously--original, habitual, actual and now
structural sin--, then we should take seriously the need to overcome
original distortion, habitual distortion, actual distortion and
institutionalized collective distortion.
Ignatius had a clear
sense of the problem, and, although he lacked modern scientific tools,
I think he was more radical and realistic than most. According to him,
unless our commitments and affective inclinations are in order, we are
out of touch with reality. In that case, the search for truth is more
than a matter of evidence, logical rigor and even greater
self-consciousness. Reality is reasonable, but we are naive if we
suppose that reason alone can take us to it. We need to free the chains
on our imagination and intelligence and overcome institutional barriers
which prevent the most important questions from getting raised. This
cognitive liberation depends in turn on untangling our disordered
inclinations and ordering our commitments.
Unless education
addresses the way our thinking is grounded in our commitments and
shored up by the structure of our affectivity, then, for all our
rationality, the way we are searching for the truth must be challenged
on strictly academic grounds. We will have to doubt whether the
classroom, cafeteria and faculty lounge debates will advance very far.
Persistent, reasonable discourse rarely leads us beyond fundamental
philosophical and theological positions to question the commitments
behind the ideas.
Most of the modern "masters of suspicion"
and sociologists of knowledge who posed the problem of subconscious
bias so trenchantly prescribed more reason and more conscious awareness
as the solution. Here, too, I think Ignatius is more realistic and
radical. He not only recognized that affectivity and commitment are key
to the problem; unlike most others he also saw them as key to the
solution.
Liberating Education.
The second lesson
of the encounter with the victims was this: Genuine education,
especially for "our tribe", must engage students personally at the
level of experience and practice, challenging their commitments and
value-priorities. Authentic formation leads to wisdom which, we know,
involves a kind of knowing that engages the whole person. The encounter
of the pilgrims with the poor Central Americans produced in the
visitors an experiential knowledge, involving intellect, will and the
"affections". This kind of knowledge transforms the person. This, I
think, is the.prime analogue of knowing.
Mathematics and natural
science require dispassionate observation, free from affective
interference. They depend on something approaching pure reason. This
kind of knowledge, while indispensable, is insufficient for
understanding life. We cannot grasp life’s meaning by analyzing it from
a distance (even though we can know aspects of life in this way through
psychology, sociology, etc.), much less by surgically separating the
facts from the values. Understanding the irreducibly moral drama of
life requires moral sympathy and practical commitment. It requires
entering into the drama and allowing it to enter us. This is what
happens when we come to know another person in friendship or as we fall
in love. It is what happens when we enter a foreign country or a new
neighborhood or place of work. For the truth to sink in, we have to
adjust to reality both morally and practically. This kind of
experiential knowledge does not depend in the first place in IQ. Many
people who are less gifted intellectually and who lack formal education
are wiser than many academics, even though the former may find it
difficult to express their wisdom. Paul discovered that in their search
for wisdom, the Greeks missed the most important truths of all. He
preached only Christ crucified--the wisdom and power of God.
Certain
kinds of experiences occasion in people who are properly disposed
feelings and moods that spring from their very center, feelings and
states that Ignatius calls "consolation" and "desolation". These
typically reveal the direction which leads the individual toward
greater self-transcendence and into greater light, or, on the other
hand, they indicate the person’s resistence to self-transcendence.
Consolation is accompanied by new images and concepts which expand
one’s limited horizon undermine intellectual bias. Desolation discloses
my resistance to this kind of liberation. We need to learn to interpret
such feelings and states. In order to assimilate reality, the visitors
to El Salvador had to "sit with" the experience, working through the
feelings and the thoughts it evoked. As they entered that reality, it
not only stirred their thoughts but also their feelings. Eventually, it
moved the hands and our feet of most of them; for reality invites a
response. It draws us out of ourselves. Our response generates new
experience which in turn further affects our understanding.
Bernard
Lonergan can help us to understand all this better. He argues that the
search for truth involves the whole person in a process of ongoing
conversion--intellectual, moral and religious conversion. Knowing
reality embraces four interconnected activities: experience,
understanding, judgment and response. That translates into four
imperatives: First, be attentive to reality. Second, be intelligent,
that is, think and understand. Third, be reasonable, that is,
distinguish between the genuine insights that correspond to reality and
those bright ideas that do not. Finally, be responsible. This last step
includes evaluating the situation morally, discerning, deciding and
acting. For Lonergan, the search for truth is nothing less than a
matter of self-transcendence leading to greater personal authenticity.
Lonergan’s cognitive theory takes distorting prejudice seriously and
also proposes a way to overcome it.
The present perspective
leads me to modify this scheme in two ways. First, we need to connect
the two ends of Lonergan’s chain. Now we see action and experience
linked in a first complex step. Thinking must be shaken up and
stimulated by practice (in the end, I will argue, by commitment, by
love). Practice generates questions for reflection. Tying the two ends
of the chain gives us a "heuristic circle," or rather a spiral, which
progressively deepens our understanding of reality. It is a spiral
which should of itself lead us to the encounter with the victim.
However, personal and institutional prejudice can stave off that
encounter. We therefore need to incorporate the reality of the victim
explicitly into the heuristic circle.
That is the second change
we need to make: We need to ask ourselves: Be attentive to what
experience? What reality and who’s experience are we talking about? As
Ellacuría put it, we need to experience the impact of the reality of
the victims. That brings us to the heart of reality. The encounter with
the poor which we described earlier suggests to me the priority of
being attentive to the victims and learning from their experience.
(In
a provocative essay, Gil Bailie tries to diagnose the crumbling of
Western philosophy which we witness today in the thought of
deconstructionists like Jacques Derridá. Appealing to René Girard’s
analysis of culture, Bailie understands Western philosophy as an
attempt to explain reality abstractly while at the same time ignoring
the violence which lies at the base of all human societies. By trying
to explain reality and at the same time ignore the victim, Western
philosophy, for all its progress, has chased its tail for 25 centuries
and has entered into a radical crisis, along with most of our social
institutions, now that we are no longer able to hide this foundational
violence.)
Re-configuring our World.
The encounter
with the poor teaches us a third lesson about education: More than
other experiences, this one raises the deep questions we most need to
ask, stimulates reflection on them and leads people to re-configure
their world-view. The practical option for the poor, attention to
suffering reality, understanding reality and sound judgment about
reality shakes our worldview at its foundations. It helps re-shape the
basic anthropological, cosmological and cognitive assumptions that form
the horizon for our interpretation. It leads us to what Lonergan calls
a "higher viewpoint".
The modified Lonergan schema supposes
that we face a root prejudice that we all need to overcome. This
"original prejudice" is the division of the world into important people
and unimportant people. When we read the world, when we watch the
nightly news and when we read the gospel, the same thing comes to
light. Every existing culture divides the world into important people
and unimportant people. Sometimes it’s important races and unimportant
races; sometimes it’s men vs. women, or rich and poor; or workers and
owners; or the elders and the youth. The root distortion is that some
are more human than others.
The two modifications we make in
Lonergan’s schema together imply that commitment to the victim is
indispensable for understanding reality. The modern "masters of
suspicions" and sociologists of knowledge have helped us understand how
bias and interest distort our thinking. They offer partial solutions.
Practical solidarity with the victims, love, is the key to overcoming
the original prejudice, the key to intellectual conversion.
It
is from the foot of the cross that we begin to see straight; it is from
there that we can put things in proper perspective. From there, we can
certainly do philosophy. But when we avoid the unsettling reality of
the crucified victims of history, our wisdom turns to foolishness.
Well,
what do we see from the foot of the cross? We see that the center of
the drama which we are living is the great struggle between good and
evil--the drama of suffering and oppression, on the one hand, and
liberation for communion on the other. The victim is at the heart of
the cognitive model, and the model confirms that the victim is at the
heart of reality.
The Mission of the Christian University.
Ellacuría
said that the central object of study should be la realidad. If the
heart of reality is oppression-liberation in its many dimensions, the
central question for all of us is, What does this mean for us? That in
turn suggests that understanding this drama and what it means for us
should be at the center of the university’s agenda.
American
universities are not the UCA; the U.S. is not Central America; the new
decade will not the 1970s or the 80s. Can we put injustice and
liberation at the center of this university’s agenda without violating
the spirit of free inquiry, without falling into the worst caricatures
of political correctness? It may be difficult, but I think it is still
necessary. I do not mean that this should be the the exclusive focus of
study. There are still differential equations, organic chemistry and
biology to learn. But failing to put injustice and liberation at the
center means relegating them to the periphery. In that case, we would
be conducting a partial search for truth, partial in its omission of
large chunks of what we all need to learn, and partial in the sense
that the university’s search for truth would be driven by interests
other than authentic formation and the pure desire to know.
This
kind of a commitment gives new dynamism to teaching and research--and
stimulates the proyección social we spoke of at the beginning.
Proyección social.
As
I mentioned in the beginning, in Latin America, and at the UCA in
particular, we add to teaching and research a third instrument by which
the university serves society, namely, proyección social, roughly
translated as social outreach. "Proyección social means projecting the
information, the critique, concrete proposals for solutions, in short,
the educational work proper to a university, out into the society. Ex
corde ecclesiae calls for the Catholic university "demonstrate the
courage to express uncomfortable truths, truths that may clash with
public opinion but that are also necessary to safeguard the authentic
good of society" (no. 32). The Jesuits at the UCA were killed for just
this. They publically attacked abuse and unmasked the official lies
during the civil war. They understood this to be, at least in that
context, the principle service that the university was providing to
society.
Social projection is going on in universities in the
U.S. What form should proyección social take here? Should a Catholic
university criticize military spending? Should the president call for
an end to the death penalty? Maybe few would notice! The board of
directors would probably notice, and the faculty senate. Would they
take the president to task for engaging the university in this way?
Wisdom is needed here, but also daring. Martin Luther King said to the
decent standers-by: I know where you stand on prudence; I don’t know
where you stand on courage. Silence is sometimes complicity. Consult,
I’d say; then speak out. Let people publically dissent. At the UCA
proyección social provoked controversy inside the university and bombs
from outside. But we are a better university today for all of it.
Conclusion.
When
the university gives priority to suffering and the conditions for
liberation and takes a stand with the poor, then it is committing
itself to greater academic excellence, not less. It is committed to
coming closer to the truth. Not everyone will see it that way. Some
will object that all this compromises the university and its work. If
we are honest, we recognize that every university’s agenda is already
compromised by a variety of interests other than the pure search for
truth. Rather colleges and universities need something like the kind of
cognitive hygiene outlined here.
The commitment to excellence
will probably invite the equivalent of persecution in the United
States, that is, loss of prestige and even funding. I suspect, though,
that it would also stir up new sources of funding and a new sense of
identity, even evangelical "prestige". Persecution also provides the
opportunity to bear witness to a fuller set of criteria for educational
excellence and to what it means to be a Christian university today.
Ignacio Ellacuría defended the university’s option for the poor in these terms.
It is
often said that the university should be impartial. We do not agree.
The university should strive to be free and objective, but objectivity
and freedom may demand taking sides. We are freely on the side of the
popular majority because they are unjustly oppressed and because the
truth of the situation lies within them both negatively and positively.
Our university as a university has an acknowledged preferential option
for the poor, and it learns from them in their reality . . . . We take
this stand with them in order to be able to find the truth of what is
happening and the truth that all of us must be seeking and building
together.
There are good theoretical reasons to think that such
an effort is well grounded epistemologically, but in addition, we think
there is no alternative in Latin America, in the Third World, and
elsewhere, for universities and intellectuals who claim to be of
Christian inspiration. Our university is of Christian inspiration when
it places itself in this preferential option for the poor, who in
quantitative terms are the greatest humanistic challenge facing
humankind.
We can say the same with each one’s search for truth. Augustine stressed faith-commitment as a condition for understanding: crede ut intellegas! We must also say today, especially for our middle-class "tribe", dilige ut intellegas!, love that you might understand.
The Three Poles of Experience (or Reality).
In
order to flesh out the implications of the modified Lonergan cognitive
scheme, I propose to expand it into an 9-step "path," a "way" to the
truth. But first, it will help to attempt to draw a map of reality.
Every
experience has a subjective side to it (what goes on inside me) and an
objective side (what goes on outside me). When we reflect more
carefully, we see, in addition, that our experience includes all those
cultural products--symbols and concepts--by which we interpret the
world. This cultural word by which we make sense of the world belongs
primarily to the world "out there".
This gives us, if you
will, three interrelated poles of experience--the two outer poles of
(A) concrete reality itself and (B) the word, or logos, about reality
and (C) the inner pole of my interior life. All three poles of reality
overlap, but only partially. Each grows out of the others and is
organically linked to the others; but each is clearly distinguishable.
Each of the three poles of experience is a source of truth about
reality. The truth comes from the world, from the word and from within
me. (It may help to consider a trinitarian correspondence: There is the
truth that comes from the Creator of the world, the truth of the Son
who is the Word and the truth of the Spirit who lives within us.)
In
our quest for truth, we need to attend to all three poles of reality.
But this is no simple task, because each pole is highly complex in its
own right. My interior life is a complex mix of affect, understanding
and volition. Concrete reality is also obviously very complex, and so,
too, is the cultural word. It is because of the complexity of this
schema that an adequate set of principles for discovering truth will
have to include--it seems to me--at least the following nine criteria.
The Path of Truth: Nine Steps.
More
than a method, these criteria constitute a way of life. Each criterion
has its location on the three-pole map of experience.
1.
Conversion. The first and most important requirement in the search for
truth is undergoing a basic intellectual and moral conversion. This
consolidates and deepens over a lifetime. This means developing the
capacity to transcend ourselves intellectually and morally--and,
ultimately, to fall in love with God. This affects the questions that
we raise and framework in which we locate data. According to the Bible,
a person who has not undergone such a fundamental conversion is walking
in the darkness, no matter how clever he or she might be. Three
Ignatian principles are directly related to this personal
transformation: the "magis" principle, indifference and the "agere
contra" principle. The first two make up the Foundation (SpEx [23]).
The third is embodied in the Two Standards (SpEx [136-147]) and the
Third Kind of Humility (SpEx [167]).
2. Praxis. Conversion
implies practical commitment, and our practice profoundly affects our
worldview. Bystanders on the sidelines of a football game might be able
to analyze what is happening best. But in the moral game of life, only
participants on the field can grasp what is really going on. We do not
just need, or primarily need, to think ourselves into a new way of
acting. We need to act ourselves into a new way of thinking (Margaret
Collins, C.S.J.).
Commitment, like the decision to marry
someone, shakes out the ambiguities of one’s feelings and thoughts
about such a commitment and precipitates either confirmation or its
opposite. As Augustine said, I believe that I may understand. I make a
revisable commitment that I may understand. In particular, I love that
I may understand.
Practical commitment raises questions and
forces us to think things through and to change. Of course, a lot of
people are active for all kinds of reasons and may "know their way
around." The practice in question is love, solidarity.
The
search for truth takes place within an ongoing rhythm of
action-reflection-action. The following four points have to do with
reflection within discernment.
3. Feeling the Impact of Reality
and Discerning Interior Movements. Getting in touch with the truth is
not a matter of experiential or literary consumerism. It is first of
all a matter of qualitative appreciation of the deepest drama of life.
That drama is the life-and-death, love-and-injustice struggle going on
all around us and the most important knowledge of it is via mutual
penetration, as we have said. That knowledge shakes us out of our
prejudices and opens us up to a wider horizon, draws us out of
ourselves. It attunes us like a musical instrument to values and helps
us put things in proper order. It makes us susceptible to the interior
consolations, desolations and "counsels" of which Ignatius speaks, and
permits us to reflect with greater clarity and perception.
As
Pascal said, the heart has reasons the mind knows not. The converted
heart (not mere impulse) inclines toward what is true and good, and
consolation inclines the heart not only toward what is true and good
and morally right. See the Ignatian Rules for the Discernment of
Spirits and the Methods for Election (SpEx [313-336 and 176]). A person
who searches for the truth finds that following the consolation, and
also discovering the patterns of consolation and desolation, can aid
enormously in understanding the world.
This is a crucial moment in the process of conscientization.
4.
Conscientization. Searching for the truth requires conscientization
concerning objective social reality. Conscientization is a matter of
unmasking systematic distortion. It is a matter of waking up from
sleep. Christians profess belief in original sin, structural sin and
personal sin. (This doesn’t require much religious faith; it simply
requires perception.) And yet we frequently fail to draw the cognitive
consequences: the personal and systemic distortion of reality.
Uncovering this reality is much more than a matter of getting the facts
straight. In the first place, it includes evaluating social reality
critically. Who profits here? Who suffers? Who has control? To whom are
they accountable? How do these policies and institutions affect the
weak? In the second place, conscientization questions my world, and my
place in it. For this reason, like psychotherapy and conversion,
conscientization requires time, effort and mediators.
5. Utopian
Imagination. Conscientization unmasks evil. But the deeper truth of
reality is positive. Conscientization helps us recognize that things
are much worse than we thought. But, as we grow in that understanding,
we also grow in awareness that reality is much more wonderful than we
dared to imagine. There is a revolution of love, precarious and
persecuted, underway everywhere.
We not only have the right to
dream, we have the obligation to dream. We are the animals with
imagination, the ones capable of transcending the narrow confines of
the status quo. Few things can paralyze effective thinking and action
more effectively than short-sighted "realism" that cripples
imagination. Realpolitik, locked into the visible possibilities, can
only bring us armed enclaves and nuclear deterrents. It cannot move us
to creative non-violence. It is realistic about human egoism, but not
unrealistic about divine grace. It expects no surprises.
Responsible
utopian imagination is rational, rooted in present reality and guided
by praxis. Utopian imagination answers the questions: What kind of
people do we want to be and can we be? What kind of society do we want
to have and can we have? What kind of economy? What kind of church?
What kind of government?
6. Reason and Science. This is familiar
university terrain. Obviously reason is essential to understanding
reality, especially the disciplined reason of philosophy, psychology
and the social sciences which are crucial to conscientization.
University students have a special obligation to understand how the
world works, in order to change it. Ideology has a pejorative
connotation today, partly because of dogmatic abuse, but also because
of anti-intellectual prejudice and pragmatism. We all need to develop
coherent understanding of how the world actually works--a social theory
which explains the facts and which is permanently open to revision in
the light of new data.
The search for truth takes place in a
social environment. Individuals need to draw on a tradition-bearing
community of critical support in their ongoing formation. The remaining
three criteria are concerned with this communal dimension of the
conditions for discernment.
7. Community. No one has infinite
knowledge or infinite moral sensitivity; we all approach reality from a
partial perspective. We need help overcoming our blindness and
prejudice. But even apart from that, reality is so rich and complex, so
filled with mirages and blind alleys, that getting at the truth
requires insight from many different perspectives. Personal
intellectual and moral autonomy is a paramount value, but that has
nothing to do with self-sufficiency.
We therefore need to
belong to a local moral community that can both inform us and call us
to account in the daily challenge to discover the truth and put it into
practice. Not any kind of community will do for this. The task requires
a community that draws on a deep tradition of practical wisdom. Of
course, the church is supposed to be just this kind of community. But
so is the university, in its own proper way, a tradition-bearing
community of this kind.
We do not simply need adversaries to
challenge us. We especially need help from others in order to sustain a
counter-cultural vision and commitment. Recall those North American
pilgrims to Central America. The pilgrims, typically blown away, soon
confront the challenge back home of nourishing and maintaining their
new vision vision of the world. We urge them to meet with others who
have had similar experiences to help shore up their new outlook against
the corrosive effects of the dominant culture back home. This same need
for community faces former members of the Jesuit Volunteer Corps and
anyone, really, who undertakes a serious Christian commitment.
8.
Tradition. Communities that claim to provide comprehensive guidance for
living are bearers of traditions of wisdom. They draw from the well of
centuries, even millennia, of experience and reflection (compared to my
20 or 40 or 60 years). Traditions embody prejudice as well as
enlightenment and need to be adapted to changing circumstances. But, as
we said earlier, we can neither escape them nor live responsibly
without them. This is not bad news at all. As Daniel Berrigan once
said, we can’t go anywhere unless we are coming from somewhere.
In
a university, we certainly need not all identify with the same
tradition. Some traditions harbor more wisdom than others. But we can
learn from most of them. Pluralism and tolerance need not degenerate
into relativism; they should instead foster mutual enrichment and
corrective and eventually lead us to a higher unity. Even, or
especially, when we are convinced that ours is the most adequate
tradition, we need to enter into dialogue with others to overcome our
prejudices, avoid sclerosis and to develop an ecumenical social agenda.
The
point to stress in liberal, individualistic societies is that, unless
we identify with a tradition-bearing community, we flounder about
formed by traditions of which we are unaware, shaped as much by market
forces and mass media as by anything else.
9. Authority.
Nothing is easier to abuse than authority, but that ought not blind us
to its legitimate use. Ironically, authorities (like community and
tradition) are essential to authentic personal autonomy, as we said
earlier. When I want to have my teeth or my car fixed, I go to
"authorities". The same is true in the intellectual and the moral life.
Conscience does not kneel before the authorities, however; conscience
kneels before the truth.
These nine principles seem to me
essential for getting at the truth, that is, for a decent education.
Something would be lacking to a serious search for the truth if any one
of these elements were seriously lacking.
Three Poles of Experience, Revisited.
The
logic of these criteria appears more clearly when we locate them on the
map of experience that we charted earlier. As we said, the three poles
are internally complex and overlap among themselves. Each of our nine
criteria corresponds to one of the three poles of discernment: the
subjective pole (conversion, affective movements, utopian imagination
and reason); the pole of objective reality (praxis, the impact of
reality, conscientization); and the pole of interpretation/evaluation
of reality (the sciences, community, tradition, and authority).
In
its search for truth, in teaching, research and proyección social, the
university gives priority to "la realidad". "The literature" (B) serves
to illumine reality. In order to be responsible, the search for truth
must touch all three of these bases and accord each the attention it
deserves.
It is important not to lose the forest for the trees
here. I think we can specify a nucleus for each of the three poles. The
central element of concrete reality is the victim (see the parable of
the Good Samaritan and Matthew’s final judgment). As far as the
interior pole is concerned, the central focus is reason and (assuming
ongoing conversion) the discernment of interior movements. What shall
we say about the cultural word? In the medieval university, the Word of
God had pride of place and, in particular, the person of Jesus Christ
as the Word which interprets all other words. The modern Christian
university, may propose (it does not impose) Christ as the supreme
Word, because it has confidence in the power of truth and reason, and
rightly so. The authority of Christ will be a point of arrival for many
rather than a point of departure.
In our times, we are subject
to pluralism and, of course, confusion. Intelligent and committed
people disagree about interpreting and evaluating reality. Most
recognize today that no single philosophical system is capable of
accounting for reality. It is also probably impossible to ground an
adequate moral system apart from the kind of religious or
quasi-religious beliefs which insure disagreement and which, in any
case, no university wishes to impose, including a Christian university.
These nine criteria do not make up a philosophical or theological
system, however, but rather a path, a discipline. It seems to me that
most open and reasonable people could agree that something like these
criteria is necessary for us to arrive at theoretical and moral truth.
The nine-point path affirms reason and presupposes that we are called
to pursue the most reasonable options. But it recognizes that, because
of our prejudices and the limits of our brains, reasoning alone is
insufficient for arriving at what is most reasonable. Much more is
required, including ongoing conversion, practical commitment, attention
to affective movements, utopian imagination, a wisdom-bearing community
and dialogue. It seems to me that it would be theoretically and morally
irresponsible to ignore any one of the above points on the path.
I
propose this path, not only for its internal coherence but especially
because of my own experience. As a university student in 1969, I
entered into a four-year period of crisis and confusion about basic
truths and values. As I floundered around, I discovered that closeness
to the life-and-death struggles of the poor in Lower Manhattan helped
to focus and center my scattered thoughts and feelings. As I attended
to the interior movements, frequently occasioned by external events, I
noticed that some led to peace and light and others to greater
confusion. I noticed, finally, that taking tentative stands and making
practical commitments brought further light--or sometimes greater
confusion, but in any case, they advanced my search.
The first
seven markers on the path present fewer difficulties to contemporary
sensibilities than the last two--tradition and authority. These meet
stiff resistance within an individualistic, pluralistic society. The
limitations and dangers of communities and their authority are obvious
but we cannot do without either community or authority in our search
for truth. While their abuses are inexcusable, they are inevitable in
real, as opposed to ideal (non-existing), groups of imperfect human
beings. If you want a tradition-bearing community, this is part of the
price.




