Reconcile with ourselves | Inquirer Opinion
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Reconcile with ourselves

12:30 AM October 08, 2021

I heard one presidential candidate announce that he will advocate reconciliation should he win. After the toxic divisiveness of the last five years, the sound of a reconciled society does sound like an angelic song. I agree; all Filipinos should move to reconcile with one another no matter who wins.

At the same time, to make reconciliation meaningful and long-lasting, it is not a matter of us shaking each other’s hands. It does not happen that way, except if it is only for photo ops. When persons differ with their fundamental values and belief systems, the next conflict is only an issue away. Reconciliation, then, must begin with those at odds agreeing to fundamental parameters.

In the intangibles, in motherhood statements, it is easy to agree. Freedom, democracy, justice, peace, prosperity, a future full of hope. With these, we can easily hug each other as brothers and sisters under one flag. So let us not go and overstate the obvious anymore. Let us take all these for granted.

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Instead, let us go where the probability of conflict can start so any reconciliation becomes possible beyond fake smiles and cold handshakes. What upsets us? What can push us to disagree badly enough to draw battle lines? These areas or issues are where we should begin to pay attention to. They can be very difficult and contentious. With them, we test our resolve to reconcile.

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Being human with both needs at the primal level and rosy dreams for the future, let us decide to avoid what harms us in body and soul. When we can agree to not do what is harmful, we save ourselves many fights down the line. So let us list down simple acts that can harm us.

Killing. Can we agree that killing is an act that prejudices the victim, his family, and perhaps, even his community? If all of us do not want to be killed, or our family members to be killed, or our neighbors to be killed, maybe we can put killing at the top of our list of the most unacceptable to all.

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Stealing. Can we agree that stealing is an act that prejudices the victim, that it is wrong to take without knowledge or consent of the owner, that which rightfully belongs to him or her? Can we agree that stealing another’s material possessions, whether that be money, land, house, clothes, food or other items of value, is wrong and extends its damage beyond just its victims? Can we agree that we cannot maintain order or a peaceful way of life if stealing is tolerated? With killing, can we then add stealing as unacceptable to our common good?

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Lying. Can we agree that lying is destructive to persons, to the community, or to common understanding? Our agreements have to be commonly understood and commonly complied with. Lying fractures or distorts common understanding or agreement, and it can be personal or collective. When we do not understand something in common, we can then never agree on anything. Lying especially destroys relationships and erodes the very basis of understanding.

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Grounding ourselves on common values or understanding is fundamental to societal life’s survival. Without that, it will be superior force over others, the strong over the weak, chaos over order. The era of the alpha ape, the caveman, the Neanderthals, and the bloodthirsty savage is over.

Or, if it is not, then we can agree to be barbarians again and forget all common sense and common order. That way, those who survive the carnage can then begin to again sit down, discuss possibilities, and most of all, agree that killing, stealing, and lying are not to be tolerated.

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In many societies whose members had become so fractured and antagonistic with one another, especially if two competitive sides can never get along and drag everyone else with them, civil wars had been the final arbiter. Only when so much blood has been spilled, people often come to their senses. They had been fighting along because of partisanship, not with principles they already share the same, but with the choice of personalities to follow.

Following personalities had become important enough for good people to turn bad, for honest people to turn liars, for peaceful people to turn violent. Worst of all, for intelligent people turn stupid.

Reconciliation starts among partisans again choosing to both agree, not to be friends with one another, but to be loyal to what is very important to them. Not to kill. Not to steal. Not to lie. When feuding parties decide that protecting life is more important than killing it, that keeping and enjoying one’s possessions is more important than having it stolen, that accepting reality is more important than denying it or distorting it, that is reconciliation.

Because people live and then die. Because personalities come and then go. But life stays, in our children and grandchildren and more generations to come, because possessions remain important to those who own them, whoever the owners may be, because reality becomes history and, therefore, the basis of our identity. What is more important is what can be more permanent and beneficial to many, to communities and society, and we would do well to reconcile with that.

Reconciling with personalities becomes natural and easier when we have not killed one another, when we have not stolen from one another, when we have not lied to one another. Reconciling with fundamental agreements that keep society intact and our families safe in peaceful coexistence is true and enduring. If this is the reconciliation that candidates will dedicate their lives to make happen, they are worth our while.

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There is no other reconciliation, by the way. Any other kind is simple politicking, insidious sugarcoating exploiting the exasperation and frustration of especially the poor about the warring parties of the greedy, ambitious, and powerful. That reconciliation will last exactly until the next killing, the next theft, the next lie.

TAGS: 2022 elections, governance, politics, reconciliation

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