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The parable of a judge

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 There was once a city judge, the New Testament tells in a parable told by Jesus, who stood out in his time for two distinct traits, not necessarily inconsistent: he did not fear God and neither respected man.

      Former Senator  Leila de Lima is more fortunate in her time and place: no such judge probably exists, at least for one reason.  This country stands, as it is used to be  proudly described, as the only Christian nation in Asia. That may  no  longer be true today; there are other neighbors who can make a claim that they are a stronger Christian nation.   South Korea is one of them and is known to  punish past leaders for wrongdoings. 

      In the biblical parable, there was also a woman, a widow, to be exact, who kept coming to the city judge, who apparently was annoyed constantly by it.  The widow demanded that  justice be given to her against  her adversary who had wronged her.   There were no illegal drugs yet in those days, although the same evil beset the land, as  De Lima’s is or has been.   The perfect tense makes perfect sense in the former senator’s case. Hence,  it’s called  a continuing  saga for the lamented lawmaker .

       The city judge was not bothered by his conscience, obviously, because  of two things he didn’t have.  Thus, he was more inconvenienced by the constant banging at his gate or his court by the widow than her exhausting pursuit  to be avenged against her adversary.  Clearly, the enemy  was singular but  powerful. Power is plural.

         In those days, a woman was not only a weaker vessel but a lesser one. In other words, a woman was looked at as  second class.   One Christian group thinks that’s the same reason de Lima, a woman, has been treated not by just one man, but many, in a land where  there are many  Christians and there are many lawyers.  Misogyny is part of the injustice.   It could have been worse, if she were a widow; widows in Jesus’ time, were even more helpless. In De Lima’s case, it is good that she’s a lawyer, a prominent one that.  

          It took more than six years for a city judge to declared her  innocent of one of three criminal case filed against  her by her enemies. Respect for men more than fear of God was evident in the judge’s decision. There was no written indication on the dispositive portion of the ruling that a better fear was important. One important witness against her had publicly recanted her own previous  damning testimony that  De Lima gained financially  from the illegal drugs trade.  That’s the basis for the judge’s long-delayed decision.  In the parable’s unjust judge decision, he just wanted the widow to stop pestering him ,not  because it was the just thing to do.

          Ironically, it was fear of men, or their process, that made the judge  vindicate the former senator. The witness ,who recanted his  testimony, said he swore on a lie  forced or coerced into him by a powerful man, for fear of a more powerful, if not a  most powerful man, for his life or safety.  The culture of fear was shared.  There were other judges at that time who wouldn’t even touch  De Lima’s  case with a ten-foot pole for the same reason. Fear bound the eyes of those who could see. 

         “ If a man has his eyes bound, “Frank Kafka said, “you can encourage him as  much as you can tell to stare through the bandage, but he’ll never see anything.’ After the fear was gone, the witness told the truth in court  and the judge saw more clearly. Another judge, the last of  the three , needs to see as the other judges saw the innocence, without fear,  to set De Lima finally free.         

          In getting her delayed justice, which the oft-quoted maxim equates with being justice denied,  and her powerful enemies no longer feared, De Lima believes her prayers have been answered.  Leon Tolstoy had penned a short story  along that line: God sees the truth and waits.  There are always the unconvinced and unrepentant. The justice secretary thinks  although the former justice secretary was acquitted, she is still guilty.  The former president believed to be behind her incarceration for as long  says the judge’s decision was flawed.  Other well-known members of  a former choir sing the same tune. One of them mainstains that it was karma that did the former senator in. 

         

         History is generally viewed to be not random. It generates its own momentum. It goes forward with an agenda of its own and it’s unstoppable. There are many possibilities now for De Lima. One of them is to go legally  after  those –her adversaries– who maliciously prosecuted  her, wasted precious time in her life and deprived her precious  rights as  citizen and senator.  There’s a law to that, another former senator said  , but  it is a road less taken because it is not financially rewarding  damage-wise . 

           However,there is always the moral side to it. As a victim of human rights violations, a living testimony as collateral damage in the war against drugs, she can add more energy and credence to the pending probe of the International Criminal Court on crime against humanity in the Philippines.  Or she can run again for public office where her voice will be heard once more.   She has her momentum now and, more than ever, is  on the right  side of history.

            In fine, she has the right role cut out for her.   Like the widow in the parable, the least she can do is unrelentingly trouble the judiciary or the judge about injustice in the land. It might just work.

          

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