The Prose of Suffering and the Practice of Silence
1. No poverty
0601 history and archaeology
06 humanities and the arts
16. Peace & justice
DOI:
10.1353/scs.2004.0011
Publication Date:
2007-01-09T04:31:08Z
AUTHORS (1)
ABSTRACT
ters with refugees in Freetown, Sierra Leone, in the wake of that country's decade-long civil war. My subject is suffering—how it is borne and how it is explained—by people in very different circumstances. The question of suffering is central to all religions, and has, in recent years, become increasingly focal for anthropologists living and working among people enduring the effects of war, poverty, natural disasters, and epidemic illness. It is difficult to do justice to what people suffered in the Sierra Leone conflict, but one may perhaps venture to describe how people responded to their suffering. And here I would like to emphasize something that struck me years ago, living and working in Kuranko villages—the way people are taught to accept adversity, and endure it. It is the overriding lesson of initiation, when pain is inflicted on neophytes so that they may acquire the virtues of fortitude and imperturbability. Pain is an unavoid- able part of life; it can neither be abolished nor explained away; what matters most is how one suffers and withstands it. This is nicely expressed in a Kuranko proverb that exploits the fact that the words dununia ("load") and dunia ("world") are near homonyms—dunia toge ma dunia; a toge le a dununia ("the name of the world is not world; it is load") that is, the weight of the world is a matter of how one comports oneself. According to this view, life is a struggle between one's inner resources and external conditions. Expressed in a more existential vein, one might say that human existence is a struggle to strike some kind of balance between being an actor and being acted upon. In spite of being aware that eternity is infinite and human life finite, that the cosmos is great and the human world small, and that nothing anyone says or does can immunize him or her from the contingencies of history, the tyranny of circumstances, the finality of death, and the accidents of fate, every human being needs some modicum of choice, craves some degree of "(A)nd I realized then the unmitigable chasm between all life and all print - that those who can, do, those who cannot and suffer enough because they
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