Forgiveness is necessary in the long fight for a just world-but it is only possible after the oppressed are victorious.
For too long, revolutionary social movements have reconciled to defeat. We must start winning again. Forgiveness is a necessary strategy for remaking the world, to secure and sustain victories, to turn one-time enemies into friends.
With deep political commitment and lucid moral clarity, David Renton makes the case for forgiveness, but of a particularly unruly sort. Tracing the tragic abuse of Eleanor Marx and Jane Wells, the mistakes of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the courage of the Bolshevik Revolution, and the redemption of an American televangelist, Renton urges us to forgive, but only after tearing down the citadels of the rich.
Revolutionary Forgiveness merges history with philosophy, infuses politics with ethics, and connects collective struggle with the individual's search for justice to demand a future for all-when the oppressed will be magnanimous in power, and even former oppressors will be free.