<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
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<journal-id>1806-6445</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Sur - Revista Internacional de Direitos Humanos]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Sur]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>1806-6445</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Sur - Rede Universitária de Direitos Humanos]]></publisher-name>
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<article-meta>
<article-id>S1806-64452008000100003</article-id>
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<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Lost in translation: Expressions of human suffering, the language of human rights, and the South African Truth and reconciliation commission]]></article-title>
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<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Saunders]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Rebecca]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
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<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Illinois State University  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
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<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2008</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2008</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>4</volume>
<numero>se</numero>
<fpage>0</fpage>
<lpage>0</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S1806-64452008000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S1806-64452008000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://socialsciences.scielo.org/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S1806-64452008000100003&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This essay examines what is gained and lost when expressions of human suffering are translated into a standardized language of human rights. I argue that South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission demonstrates the ways that this translation makes human suffering both legible and illegible. While the language of human rights functioned in powerful ways to establish a previously unacknowledged history in South Africa, identify and grant dignity to victims, and occasionally designate responsibility, I argue that it also disfigured the testimony of victims in ways that alienated them from their own experience and sometimes re-traumatized them, and that it often proved more useful to perpetrators than to victims. I also contend that the promise of healing in which the Commission wrapped its human rights message prioritized national over individual forms of healing, and allowed the South African government to substitute spiritual and symbolic forms of reparation for material ones.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Truth commission]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[South Africa]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Human rights language]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Trauma]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Healing]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Reparation]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <p><font face="Verdana" size="4"><b>Lost in translation: Expressions of human    suffering, the language of human rights, and the South African truth and reconciliation    commission </b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b>Rebecca Saunders</b> </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Replicated from    Sur - <b>Revista Internacional de Direitos Humanos</b>, S&atilde;o Paulo, n.9,    p.50-68, December 2008.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Address: <a href="mailto:rasaund@ilstu.edu">rasaund@ilstu.edu</a>    </font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> <b>ABSTRACT</b> </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> This essay examines what is gained and lost    when expressions of human suffering are translated into a standardized language    of human rights. I argue that South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission    demonstrates the ways that this translation makes human suffering both legible    and illegible. While the language of human rights functioned in powerful ways    to establish a previously unacknowledged history in South Africa, identify and    grant dignity to victims, and occasionally designate responsibility, I argue    that it also disfigured the testimony of victims in ways that alienated them    from their own experience and sometimes re-traumatized them, and that it often    proved more useful to perpetrators than to victims. I also contend that the    promise of healing in which the Commission wrapped its human rights message    prioritized national over individual forms of healing, and allowed the South    African government to substitute spiritual and symbolic forms of reparation    for material ones. </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> <b>Keywords:</b> Truth commission &#150; South    Africa &#150; Human rights language &#150; Trauma &#150; Healing &#150; Reparation    </font></p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp; </p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">This essay examines what is gained and what is    lost when expressions of human suffering are translated into a standardized    and universalized language of human rights. South Africa's formidable venture    in transitional justice, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), I argue,    demonstrates the ways in which this translation makes human suffering both legible    and illegible, the ways in which the language of human rights may, paradoxically,    be deployed toward both libratory and oppressive ends. I contend that while    the language of human rights functioned in powerful ways to establish a previously    unacknowledged history in South Africa, assign meaning to cultural trauma, identify    and grant dignity to victims, and occasionally designate responsibility, it    often proved more useful to perpetrators than to victims, functioned to prioritize    national over individual forms of healing, and allowed the South African government    to substitute spiritual and symbolic forms of reparation over material ones.    The latter has, unfortunately, abetted the ANC's conversion to a neoliberal    economic model, a policy shift that perpetuates and legitimizes among the most    deleterious of apartheid's human rights abuses&#151;the systematic production    of poverty. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Charged with the daunting tasks of bearing witness    to human suffering, facilitating some form of transitional justice, and promoting    a "culture of human rights,"The TRC was both post-apartheid South    Africa's primary mechanism for promoting a new national identity and an extraordinary    encounter between embodied local experience on the one hand and universalized    and abstract human rights principles on the other. Ultimately, however, this    scene was less one of dialogue and negotiation between material particularities    and abstract human rights talk than a mandatory translation of the former into    the latter, an obligatory exchange of particular facts and visceral testimony    for a national idiom of reconciliation and respect for human rights. While this    translation undeniably allowed for increased visibility of gross violations    of human rights and a more precise adjudication of them, it was, in many instances,    at the cost of appropriating and disfiguring victims' expressions of suffering    for the purposes of national stability&#151;or, a cynic might add, for an illusory    "peace"sufficiently convincing to attract foreign investment. It was    the Commission that translated victims' raw and fractured narratives of harm    into the austere language of rights; in the final report, it is clear that this    idiom is part of the analysis&#151;of "findings"&#151;rather than    the record of testimony. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Victims' testimonies to the TRC were organized    around the "dyslogic"of traumatic memory rather than the rationality    of human rights principles, corresponding, in large measure, to the nature of    testimony as psychoanalyst Dori Laub describes it: </font></p>       <blockquote>       <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><i>As a relation to events, testimony seems to      be composed of bits and pieces of a memory that has been overwhelmed by occurrences      that have not settled into understanding or remembrance, acts that cannot      be constructed as knowledge nor assimilated into full cognition, events in      excess of our frames of reference &#91;...&#93; In the testimony, language is in process      and in trial, it does not possess itself as a conclusion, as the constatation      of a verdict or the self-transparency of knowledge. <a href="#nt1"><sup>1</sup></a><a name="tx1"></a> </i></font></p>   </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Victims' testimony was often filled with forensically    irrelevant&#151;but psychologically and mnemonically highly significant&#151;details:    the kind of soup a woman was making when the security police came to the door,    the moment she suspected something was amiss, what her son was wearing when    she last saw him. Sometimes, testimony faltered on the aspect of anguish where    memory was stranded: they set my husband's body on fire after they killed him;    I watched the police carry my son's intestines to the ambulance. <a href="#nt2"><sup>2</sup></a><a name="tx2"></a> Sometimes,    it focused on the agony of the unknown or the missing: how was he killed? Where    is the body? Where testimonies did resolve into knowledge, they were largely    factual reconstructions of events rather than ethical arguments, cut of a very    different cloth than codified human rights discourse: fragmented and elliptical,    filled with the kinds of unwieldy memories, perceptions, opinions, and emotion    regularly expunged by the rationality of law. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> The TRC often admirably facilitated such testimony.    <a href="#nt3"><sup>3</sup></a><a name="tx3"></a> Less constrained by prosecutorial procedure, evidentiary rules, admissible    forms of discourse, and conceptions of relevance than a criminal court, the    Human Rights Victims' hearings regularly, and painfully, bore witness to this    testimony. Moreover, in their nightly, televised version, the victims' hearings    had an undeniable and significant impact on many South African minds. In the    first year of the Commission, this testimony dominated televised and radio news    and, as Robert Rotberg and Dennis Thompson contend, "educated the new society    directly, well before &#91;the Commission's&#93; official findings could be represented    to parliament and the president". <a href="#nt4"><sup>4</sup></a><a name="tx4"></a> These hearings were widely viewed as    a kind of cathartic ritual of healing, their emotional intensity counted upon    to enact a symbolic reconciliation between individuals that would function as    vicarious therapy for the nation. However, if these hearings performed certain    pedagogical and cathartic tasks, they nonetheless remained primarily expressive&#151;a    kind of "emotional window dressing", as Richard Wilson puts it&#151;rather    than structurally transformative; they had little influence on reparation proceedings,    the amnesty process, or subsequent national policy. <a href="#nt5"><sup>5</sup></a><a name="tx5"></a> Those more serious responsibilities    were entrusted to the language of human rights. </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Perpetrators of human rights abuses, moreover,    were far more likely to invoke rights language than were victims. They routinely    called on principles of due process, the right to counsel, the commission's    amnesty provision, and "the laws of the land"to protect themselves    from prosecution. <a href="#nt6"><sup>6</sup></a><a name="tx6"></a> Many appealed to tired apartheid formulae which, after all,    had long been clothed in the venerable robes of law and order. Amnesty applicants    successfully used the Courts to suppress their names at hearings and keep families    of victims from testifying; former President F.W. de Klerk, through an eleventh    hour court injunction, censored two incriminating pages of the Final Report;    and the National Party formally charged the TRC with inadequately upholding    legal standards, inadequate examination of testimony, "undermining the    ability of a legitimate political party to participate on an equal basis in    the democratic process", illicit intrusion into areas outside its jurisdiction    (such as the medical profession and media), and failure to condemn the human    rights abuses of the ANC and its allies. <a href="#nt7"><sup>7</sup></a><a name="tx7"></a> Indeed it is worthy of consideration    that even in the Chairperson's description of the "dual responsibility"of    the Commission&#151;"to provide the space within which victims could share    the story of their trauma with the nation"and to "recognize the importance    of the due process of law that ensures the rights of alleged perpetrators"<a href="#nt8"><sup>8</sup></a><a name="tx8"></a>    &#151;that "rights"and the protection of law are conceived as the    privilege of "alleged perpetrators", while victims are ostensibly    to be content with "space for sharing". </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> In addition to a translation into human rights    discourse (and from multiple languages into English), victims' testimonies to    the TRC underwent a further series of selections and transformations: only a    fraction of testimonies&#151;usually of high-profile or "symbolic"cases&#151;were    chosen for inclusion in public hearings (about 8%); only certain "qualifying"submissions    were selected by the Human Rights Violations Committee to be passed on to the    Reparations committee; and, in the Final Report, testimony was excerpted and    used as exemplary of a particular <i>type</i> of human rights violation (detention,    banishment, torture, death in custody, etc.). This succession of translations    meant that the majority of testimony was not publicly diffused, that some voices    and themes were chosen for publicity over others, that individuals' experiences    were often broken down into apparently unrelated pieces of evidence, extracted    from the messiness of their local milieu to be rearticulated in the controlled    and cleanly context of abstract human rights statutes. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> The technology employed to translate expressions    of suffering into nationally useable human rights discourse was an information    management system called Infocomm, adopted by the TRC in the latter part of    1996. <a href="#nt9"><sup>9</sup></a><a name="tx9"></a> Disciplined by Infocomm's protocol, the TRC increasingly moved toward    a data processing methodology and a "controlled vocabulary"determined    by information coding requirements. The TRC, to be sure, was confronted with    an awesome deluge of sundry testimony which it was obliged to translate into    something else: history, justice, a useable truth, a founding narrative for    the new South Africa. The Commission hence instituted a format for recording    victims' narratives and this form (which was revised four times over the course    of the proceedings) gradually morphed into a mass survey-like checklist that    could be efficiently deciphered by data processors and converted into statistical    information by analysts. In the final version of the form, the opening narrative    section of the deposition was eliminated and deponents' testimony was sometimes    cut off when pages were full. The form could be completed in about thirty minutes    by the deponent him or herself, such that a trained and attentive interlocutor&#151;or    any listener at all&#151;was rendered unnecessary. With the imposition of the    Infocomm protocol, the TRC offered a less and less hospitable environment for    bearing witness to suffering, and, as Minow rightly contends, "the benefits    of truth telling depend in no small measure on the presence of sympathetic witnesses    &#91;...&#93; Acknowledgement by others of the victim's moral injuries is a central    element of the healing process". <a href="#nt10"><sup>10</sup></a><a name="tx10"></a> </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> While the Commission's original statement-takers    had been trained by psychologists to attend sensitively to victims' testimony,    function as supportive counselors, respond to psychological needs, and facilitate    an intersubjective process of narrative reconstruction, this procedure was deemed    ineffective at extracting the factual information necessary to establish the    broad patterns of human rights abuse the Commission was mandated to document.    Under the new deposition protocol, accordingly, statement-takers were trained    to be specialized and efficient components of a knowledge production system    rather than to be responsive witnesses to traumatized people's testimony, as    Thema Kubheka, chief data processor in Johannesburg, describes: </font></p>       <blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><i>When we started it was a narrative. We let    people tell their story. By the end of 1997, it was a short questionnaire to    direct the interview instead of letting people talk about themselves &#91;...&#93; the    questionnaire distorted the whole story altogether &#91;...&#93; it destroyed the meaning.    &#91;...&#93; the emotional part of the story wouldn't go on the computer, remember    it was just a machine. You'd lose a lot&#151;we couldn't put style or emotion    into the summary. We were inputting for counting purposes. We lost the whole    of the narrative &#91;...&#93; we lost the meaning of the story. It was tragic, pathetic.    It became dry facts. <a href="#nt11"><sup>11</sup></a><a name="tx11"></a> </i></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">Responses to the Commission's questionnaire (which    could only grossly be called "testimony") were subsequently passed    on to data processors who translated them according to a classification system    called the "controlled vocabulary", comprised of forty-eight acts    of violation and three subject positions (victim, perpetrator, or witness).    Experience, perceptions, or emotion that did not conform to this classificatory    system, were disregarded. This deployment of human rights language, refined    and standardized into a legalistic technology of rights and the evidentiary    information required to be eligible for them, ultimately rendered invisible    numerous forms and aspects of suffering and was perhaps particularly deleterious    precisely because it claimed to be exposing suffering. Aimed as it was at identifying    <i>patterns</i> of human rights violations, the TRC thus made visible the quantitative    extent of certain categories of suffering, but left open little negotiation    room for deciding what suffering would be eligible for this visibility; what    "qualified"was predetermined by international standards of human rights    rather than by local exigencies or something so paltry as human experience.    </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> On the one hand, then, the TRC's mandate to    identify patterns of human rights abuse enabled acknowledgment of both the scale    and systematic nature of the nation's trauma. It also refocused analyses of    the pathogenesis of traumatic symptoms, as Frantz Fanon urged a century ago,    from the individual psyche to the pervasive and diffuse inhumanity of social    mechanisms of oppression (such as colonialism, racism, or apartheid). <a href="#nt12"><sup>12</sup></a><a name="tx12"></a> On    the other hand, the rhetoric of healing on which the TRC relied, facilitated    a slippery, and sometimes cruelly deceptive, substitution of this societal analysis    for individual rehabilitation. In his opening address, Desmond Tutu averred    that "We are a wounded people &#91;...&#93; We all stand in need of healing"&#151;    a formulation that, drawing on a long metaphorical tradition of an anthropomorphized    body politic, expediently conflated the healing of the nation with the healing    of individuals and suggested that the two would be coincident. As Martha Minow    notes, such suggestions are not uncommon in the rhetoric of truth commissions.    "The working hypothesis", she writes, "is that testimony of victims    and perpetrators, offered publicly to a truth commission, affords opportunities    for individuals and for the nation as a whole to heal &#91;...&#93; Echoing the assumptions    of psychotherapy, religious confession, and journalistic muckraking, truth commissions    presume that telling and hearing the truth is healing". <a href="#nt13"><sup>13</sup></a><a name="tx13"></a> Depicting the    nation as injured by the atrocities of apartheid and debilitated by the illness    of racism, the TRC's promise of healing nonetheless remained ambiguous on whether    the recovery aimed at was that of the nation as a political unit or of individuals.    In fact, the Commission's overriding imperative of reconciliation&#151;of healing    the body politic&#151;routinely outweighed, and sometimes even impaired, the    healing of individuals, many of whom were asked to sacrifice their personal    recovery for the nation's. While this ideology enabled a political stability    that, at times, could pass for national reconciliation, it did little to ameliorate    individuals' psychological or physical misery. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Human rights discourse which focuses on freedom    from tyranny and oppression, friendly relations among nations, a common standard    of achievement for all peoples and nations, and a social and international order    in which rights and freedoms can be fully realized, is aimed at monitoring political,    rather than criminal, offenses. <a href="#nt14"><sup>14</sup></a><a name="tx14"></a> The U.N. Declaration of Human Rights, for    example, excludes from the right to asylum "prosecutions genuinely arising    from non-political crimes"and Article 29 stipulates that the exercise of    rights and freedoms is subject to "the just requirements of morality, public    order and the general welfare in a democratic society". <a href="#nt15"><sup>15</sup></a><a name="tx15"></a> This language    emphasizes the actions and accountability of nations and political leaders,    rather than of individuals, and prioritizes public order and general welfare    over individual justice or well-being; it conceives persons as national citizens    or members of a "people". The TRC followed suit, identifying deponents    as members of political parties or racial groups, a categorization pursuant    to the Commission's mandate that made "political motivation"a requirement    for amnesty. On the one hand, it was clearly significant to both justice and    history construction to recognize individuals' imbrication in social and political    systems. As Minow contends, "By identifying individual suffering as an    indictment of the social context rather than treating it as a private experience    that should be forgotten, a commission can help an individual survivor make    space for new experiences". <a href="#nt16"><sup>16</sup></a><a name="tx16"></a> On the other hand, the practice of sorting    individuals in terms of party affiliation or apartheid-style race categories    fed into a grossly inadequate historical and social analysis on several grounds:    it made little attempt to understand human action outside of party and racial    politics; it interpreted individuals as unalloyed manifestations of a political    ideology; it failed to acknowledge and document the magnitude of suffering produced    by only quasi-institutionalized forms of discrimination and injustice; it conceived    of groups and individuals as bearing static identities rather than recognizing    the shifting, evolving, interdependent and sometimes opportunistic processes    of identity performance; and it paid little attention to local power dynamics    which, in South Africa, were often more determinative than national politics.    </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> If the TRC, then, was relatively successful    at exposing and condemning the suffering produced by myopic adherence to a political    ideology, it was much less adept at capturing the pervasive misery underwritten    by a racist media and education system or conditioned by complex and often inextricably    personal, political, familial, and/or social motivations. "In determining    political motivation", writes Wilson, "membership of a political organization    came to outweigh all other factors. 'Political' relied on politics in the narrow    liberal sense of formal membership of a political party". <a href="#nt17"><sup>17</sup></a><a name="tx17"></a> Neither did    the TRC possess an adequate mechanism for analyzing the vast field of injury    that was a byproduct of the elaborate negotiations of identity, ideology, and    pragmatic action that take place between individuals and groups, as well as    <i>within</i> groups and individuals. Indeed, as Wilson has demonstrated, the    TRC took little account of community networks and local political dynamics which,    for many, were far more significant than national parties or racial affiliation.    It paid little attention to the hermeneutic elaboration of party policies in    different regions, settings, and personal circumstances and often assumed&#151;and    sometimes explicitly requested&#151;that individuals speak on behalf of an entire    group. Thus by suggesting (however deliberately or inadvertently) that a group's    or community's suffering had been listened to and included in the national historical    record, the TRC also thereby rendered invisible the distress of many associated    (by themselves or others) with that group, whose suffering may not have conformed    to the exemplar, or whose ideology, social position, or experience differed.    </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> In the Human Rights hearings, moreover, victims'    testimony was regularly and promptly translated by Commissioners into the lesson    that all South Africans had suffered under apartheid, that such suffering was    necessary to the liberation struggle, and that reconciliation, if not forgiveness,    was the proper outcome of participation in the TRC. As Wilson observes, while    "individuals often stressed the singularity and specificity of their suffering    in a way that precluded any wider meaning, in contrast, the commissioners told    people in TRC hearings that 'you do not suffer alone, your suffering is not    unique but shared by others'". <a href="#nt18"><sup>18</sup></a><a name="tx18"></a> It is thus little wonder that many victims    felt scant affinity with either the truth or the justice produced by the Commission,    and indeed felt ultimately alienated from their own testimony. <a href="#nt19"><sup>19</sup></a><a name="tx19"></a> While victims'    testimony formulated justice in terms of community embeddedness and responsibility    to others, and while victims constructed themselves as interdependent, emotive,    and embodied subjects, the processes of translation we have been describing    distilled and decontextualized that testimony into the disembodied domain of    metaphysical statutes and calculability where victims, contrary to their own    self-representations, became autonomous, strictly rational, and equally positioned    legal subjects: forcibly removed from a home of personal relations, response,    and <i>responsibility</i> to an alien place of metaphysical statutes, adequation,    accounting, and <i>accountability</i>. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> This alienation from one's own words and experience    is similar to the misrecognition that Julie Mertus contends is produced by tribunal    justice: </font></p>       <blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><i>Tribunal justice may be meaningful to lawyers    drafting pleonastic legal documents in The Hague, diplomats declaring success    at stabilizing conflicts, and local politicians staking their claims to power    amid the smouldering embers of destroyed communities. But little satisfaction    will come to survivors &#91;...&#93; Even when the tribunal does name their crime, the    survivor may barely recognize it as the process and language of law transmutes    individual experiences into a categorically neat something else. <a href="#nt20"><sup>20</sup></a><a name="tx20"></a> </i></font></p>   </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The language of tribunal justice, like that of    human rights, makes suffering available to certain national and international    power-brokers, but by no means guarantees that it will be represented, used,    or responded to in the way in which the suffering person needs or desires. Indeed    once that suffering has been translated into an internationally standardized    language that operates by its own rules, it is no longer in the sufferer's hands;    s/he has, willingly or unwillingly, ceded power over it to distant "authorities".    </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Ironically replicating the split subjectivity    characteristic of traumatic experience, this sense of alienation from one's    own experience and language&#151;a misrecognition of one's own identity as constructed    by the Commission&#151;meant that for many testifying to the TRC was neither    a healing nor a cathartic experience. "The word catharsis gets used too    often within the TRC", writes Psychologist Brandon Hamber. "There    is a perception that as long as a person is crying then healing must be taking    place. But for the majority, crying is only the first step and there is no follow-up    after the hearings. In fact, the adrenalin of giving testimonies on national    television masked psychological problems which then surfaced later."<a href="#nt21"><sup>21</sup></a><a name="tx21"></a>    The Cape Town Trauma Center for Victims of Violence and Torture reported that    50 to 60 percent of the victims they had seen suffered serious difficulties    after giving testimony. <a href="#nt22"><sup>22</sup></a><a name="tx22"></a> In his work with political detainees who had been    tortured in custody, Psychologist Ashraf Kagee found that participation in the    TRC did not reduce distress or alleviate traumatic symptoms, and that many respondents    expressed "considerable resentment"at the TRC "for not appropriately    addressing the needs of victims". <a href="#nt23"><sup>23</sup></a><a name="tx23"></a> Ruth Picker, in conjunction with the    Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation, the Khulumani Support Group,    and the KwaZulu Natal Programme for Survivors of Violence, found that while    victims of human rights violations who participated in the TRC appreciated the    disclosure of truth, the opportunity to tell their story, and the chance to    confront perpetrators, many also felt as if they had been re-traumatized by    the experience and underwent a "significant deterioration of overall physical    and psychological health after testifying". Specifically, Picker's respondents    felt that the TRC had broken its promises in regard to reparations, that this    failure was an "act of disrespect, breach of trust, and exploitation",    that they had been rendered vulnerable by testifying in public and having their    words and experience appropriated by the Commission and other "experts"for    other purposes; that perpetrators often did not tell the truth and remained    arrogant and unremorseful, and that the TRC had contributed to their trauma    by failing to provide either follow-up information on their cases or psychological    counseling services after they had testified. <a href="#nt24"><sup>24</sup></a><a name="tx24"></a> A Khulumani press release put    the matter bluntly: </font></p>       <blockquote>       <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><i>The TRC has compromised our right to justice      and to making civil claims. In good faith we came forward and suffered the      re-traumatisation of exposing our wounds in public in the understanding that      this was necessary in order to be considered for reparations. We now feel      that we have been used in a cynical process of political expediency. <a href="#nt25"><sup>25</sup></a><a name="tx25"></a> </i></font></p>   </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">This sentiment was exacerbated by the not unreasonable    perception that the TRC had rewarded perpetrators with amnesty but offered little    compensation, justice, or chance of recovery to victims. Not surprisingly, the    view was strongly expressed in victims' workshops that the TRC had been more    successful at a national than at a local or personal level. <a href="#nt26"><sup>26</sup></a><a name="tx26"></a> What had been    lost in translation was victims' own healing; it had been sacrificed, many realized    with a bitter hindsight, for the healing of the nation. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Another way of articulating the TRC's discursive    confrontation between the standardized language of human rights and individuals'    embodied and particular expressions of suffering would be through Patricia Ewick    and Susan Silbey's distinction between <i>hegemonic tales</i> "that reproduce    existing relations of power and inequity"and <i>subversive stories </i>"that    challenge the taken-for-granted hegemony by making visible and explicit the    connections between particular lives and social organization". <a href="#nt27"><sup>27</sup></a><a name="tx27"></a> Examining    how "narratives can function to sustain hegemony or, alternatively, subvert    power", Ewick and Silbey view hegemonic tales as those that not only reproduce    existing ideologies and relations of power, but function as mechanisms of social    control, organize experience into a coherent ideology that resists challenge,    and "conceal the social organization of their own production and plausibility".    <a href="#nt28"><sup>28</sup></a><a name="tx28"></a> Subversive stories they define, by contrast, as those that "do not aggregate    to the general, do not collect particulars as examples of a common phenomenon    or rule", and that "recount particular experiences as rooted in and    part of an encompassing cultural, material, and political world that extends    beyond the local". <a href="#nt29"><sup>29</sup></a><a name="tx29"></a> From this perspective, I would argue that the language    of human rights functioned initially in South Africa as an important subversive    story, but that it has, in the post-apartheid era, increasingly assumed the    role of a hegemonic tale. The TRC was central to this change in status. For    while it succeeded in dislodging the hegemonic tale of apartheid with a subversive    story of violated human rights, it also functioned to establish a hegemonic    narrative of a new South Africa based on restorative justice, reconciliation,    a multiracial society, and inclusive citizenship. While an infinitely more benign    hegemonic tale, this new ideology made it difficult for the TRC to incorporate    and respond to stories that were non-conciliatory, that highlighted the social    and economic exclusions perpetuated under the new terms of citizenship, or that    provided evidence of the deep divisions and sharp inequalities that have persisted    into, and in some ways been condoned by, the "new"South Africa. </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> The TRC was charged with "investigating    and establishing 'as complete a picture as possible of the nature, causes and    extent of gross violations of human rights' committed under apartheid between    1960 and 1994". <a href="#nt30"><sup>30</sup></a><a name="tx30"></a> While such violations were numerous and unquestionably    merited investigation, exposure, and response, the Commission's constrained    focus on "gross human rights violations"and the restriction of the    category of "victim"to those who had experienced exceptional acts    of violence, meant that the TRC assessed only a fraction of those oppressed    by apartheid and only a fragment of the harm it inflicted. The suffering validated    as significant by the TRC&#151;identified by its translatability into globally    recognized standards of human rights&#151;thus excluded the massive amount of    affliction produced by the structural violence of apartheid itself. This unfortunately    narrow conception of "victimhood"(and thereby of "suffering")    meant that many individuals were simply not eligible for an audience with the    Commission; that numerous forms of persecution (such as detention without trial,    forced removals, obstructed freedom of movement and assembly, systemic educational,    economic, and legal discrimination), as well as numerous kinds of suffering    (such as material deprivation and psychological trauma) were minimized if not    tacitly excused; that persons were not held accountable for the acts, practices,    and varieties of inaction that directly or indirectly caused such misery; that    human rights were defined primarily as <i>freedom from</i> (torture or severe    ill-treatment), rather than <i>access to</i> (resources, services, education,    or opportunity); and that legalized oppression (which, under apartheid, as under    other totalitarian regimes, comprised the major source of human suffering) fell    outside the purview of accountability. A large body of the injustice and oppression    of apartheid was not sufficiently translatable into the language of human rights    and thus remained officially unrecognized. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Mahmood Mamdani has persuasively argued several    crucial aspects of this case. He contends that turning "the political boundaries    of a compromise into analytical boundaries of truth-seeking", the TRC obscured    the co-dependency of racialized power and racialized privilege, the simultaneous    distinction and complicity between perpetrators and beneficiaries, and, thus,    the basic structure of apartheid. <a href="#nt31"><sup>31</sup></a><a name="tx31"></a> Rather than defining perpetrators as "state    agents"and victims as "political activists", an ethically sharper    approach, he argues, "would have gone beyond notions of individual harm    and individual responsibility, and located agency within the workings of a system.    The result would have been to explain apartheid as an evil system, not just    to reduce it to evil operatives". <a href="#nt32"><sup>32</sup></a><a name="tx32"></a> He also charges the TRC with indulging    in "the legal fetishism of apartheid"in such a way that it conflated    the morally acceptable with the legal, discounted legalized forms of harm, and    exculpated those who lawfully derived benefit from others' suffering. <a href="#nt33"><sup>33</sup></a><a name="tx33"></a> "The    TRC invited beneficiaries to join victims in a public outrage against perpetrators",    writes Mamdani. "So, beneficiaries too were presented as victims."<a href="#nt34"><sup>34</sup></a><a name="tx34"></a>    Not only did such a formulation absolve beneficiaries from responsibility for    apartheid, it left their benefits and privileges, as well as the system that    supports them, well intact. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> If the TRC's rhetoric of healing obscured its    lack of ability to provide real therapeutic benefits to individuals, it also    remained unclear on whether (national or individual) recovery would be accomplished    by a program of psychological healing or by the restitution of lost goods and    property. The word <i>recovery</i>, it bears emphasizing, signifies both (1)    healing, the restoration of health and normalcy, and the process of a cure;    and (2) repossession, the return of a missing object, repayment of a debt, indemnification    or restitution. I would argue, in fact, that the TRC's focus on repairing the    nation's soul has largely been at the expense of restoring its material body,    as demonstrated by the Commission's emphasis on spiritual reconciliation and    the elimination of racialist attitudes over providing reparations and remedying    material inequity. What the TRC ultimately offered in terms of recovery for    victims was a modicum of public recognition, occasionally pieces of knowledge,    and a spiritual blessing, rather than psychological, medical, or material reparation.    In other words, it largely substituted spiritual for material forms of justice    and recovery, tacitly contending that truth would heal suffering, repair communities,    and serve as compensation for victims. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> The mandate and operations of the Reparations    and Rehabilitation committee were clearly the frailest of the Commission's three    branches; it did not hold public hearings, could only make unbinding recommendations    to Parliament, and could offer victims only a fraction of the compensation for    which they would be eligible in a criminal court. Yet as the Commission's Final    Report acknowledges, when asked what they wanted from the TRC, "thirty-eight    per cent of the commission's deponents requested financial assistance to improve    the quality of their lives. In addition, ninety per cent of deponents asked    for a range of services which &#91;could&#93; be purchased if money &#91;were&#93; made available&#151;for    example, education, medical care, housing and so on". <a href="#nt35"><sup>35</sup></a><a name="tx35"></a> Victims further    expressed strong feelings that perpetrators should be "made to contribute    materially and financially toward the reparation and rehabilitation of victims.    Most felt there could be no reconciliation with out reparation". <a href="#nt36"><sup>36</sup></a><a name="tx36"></a> These    requests were largely unfulfilled, and victims' disappointment, their sense    that they were once again being treated with disdain, was exacerbated by the    perception that perpetrators were not only <i>not</i> required to contribute    to reparations, but made eligible for amnesty. "In this context",    writes Christopher Colvin, "reparations have come to mean much more than    a means of support or a kind of recognition of suffering. They have become the    unfulfilled answer to the question of whether or not justice has been done in    the transition process". <a href="#nt37"><sup>37</sup></a><a name="tx37"></a> </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> The TRC, to its credit, recognized this imperative    and included in its Final Report the following elegant, if impotent, statement:    </font></p>       <blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><i>If we are to transcend the past and build    national unity and reconciliation, we must ensure that those whose rights have    been violated are acknowledged through access to reparation and rehabilitation.    While such measures can never bring back the dead, nor adequately compensate    for pain and suffering they can and must improve the quality of life of the    victims of human rights violations and/or their dependants &#91;...&#93;.Without adequate    reparation and rehabilitation measures, there can be no healing and reconciliation.    <a href="#nt38"><sup>38</sup></a><a name="tx38"></a> </i> </font></p>   </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2">The Commission's recommendations included urgent    interim reparation grants, community rehabilitation programs, symbolic reparations    (such as monuments and the renaming of streets), institutional reforms, and    individual reparation grants, as well as a once-off wealth tax on corporations    to endow the reparations fund. Unfortunately, the ANC government into whose    hands the TRC placed these recommendations was busy refashioning itself in the    garb of neoliberal economic reforms pleasing to the gaze of transnational capitalist    institutions but fundamentally at odds with the TRC's reparations proposals    (as well as with longtime ANC policy). </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> It quickly became apparent in South Africa that    neither the new nation nor the Truth Commission held a monopoly on human rights    language, and indeed that the globally hegemonic neoliberal economic regime    concurrently conquering the country could spout off a compulsory litany of human    rights talk as well. If human suffering can be translated into a universalized    idiom of human rights, so too, it appears, can a market ideology that produces    widespread suffering and insouciantly tramples human rights. While membership    in the global economy is made conditional upon a state's professed protection    of human rights, under this regime, as Tony Evans points out, "human rights    are conceptualized as the freedoms necessary to maintain and legitimate particular    forms of production and exchange"<a href="#nt39"><sup>39</sup></a><a name="tx39"></a> rather than as the socioeconomic rights    warranted by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to, for example, social    security (Article 22), work (Article 23), education (Article 26), and a standard    of living adequate for health and well-being "including food, clothing,    housing and medical care and necessary social services"(Article 25). <a href="#nt40"><sup>40</sup></a><a name="tx40"></a>    Emphasizing property rights and freedom from governmental control (and often    erroneously conflating "free trade"with the freedoms of people), this    market hegemony is "rephrased into universalistic value formats"<a href="#nt41"><sup>41</sup></a><a name="tx41"></a>    by institutions such as the IMF and World Bank, which stress freedom, liberalization,    elimination of barriers, growth, efficiency, opportunity, discipline and stability&#151;and    clearly cast those that oppose, or construct stories subversive to, such policies    as reprehensibly oppressive, exclusionary, inefficient, destabilizing, anti-democratic,    and unethical. <a href="#nt42"><sup>42</sup></a><a name="tx42"></a> </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> In South Africa, it became clear that this neoliberal    hegemonic tale had triumphed when, in 1996, the ANC converted from its original    Reconstruction and Development Program (RDP)&#151;which had largely followed    through on the vision of the Freedom Charter and adopted a basic-needs oriented    policy of growth from redistribution&#151;to the Growth, Employment and Redistribution    (GEAR) policy which instituted aggressive neoliberal strategies of privatization,    liberalization, and deficit reduction. Essentially a self-imposed Structural    Readjustment Program, GEAR claimed, with the strong support of the World Bank,    IMF, and South African business interests&#151;but against overwhelming global    evidence&#151;that poverty and its attendant structures of suffering could be    ameliorated through market-led economic growth and increased global competitiveness.    <a href="#nt43"><sup>43</sup></a><a name="tx43"></a> President Thabo Mbeki described this dramatic turnaround as "resist&#91;ing&#93;    the temptation to succumb to a populist urge to attempt what would have been    an adventurist and disastrous 'great leap forward'", <a href="#nt44"><sup>44</sup></a><a name="tx44"></a> in language, that    is, that implies that challenging the hegemonic neoliberal tale would not only    be self-indulgent and irresponsible, but comparable to one of history's most    hideous scenes of human rights abuse. Yet the evidence adduced by the Congress    of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) and the South African Communist Party    (SACP), as well as by scholars such as Patrick Bond, Fantu Cheru, and Richard    Peet, demonstrate that GEAR has made only meager progress in alleviating South    Africa's suffering&#151;the country's Gini-coefficient remains second only to    Brazil as the most unequal society in the world&#151;and has mostly functioned    to enrich a minuscule black elite. <a href="#nt45"><sup>45</sup></a><a name="tx45"></a> Indeed Black involvement in the economy    has made only paltry gains since 1994 and represents the success of a small    group of black businessmen working in alliance with apartheid era corporate    monopolies. According to the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation's "Economic    Transformation Audit"of 2004, a comparison of the 1996 and 2001 censuses    reveals that both income poverty and income inequality increased for the South    African population as a whole during this period, though access to some basic    services improved. Since 2001, it reports, social services to the poor have    increased, but so has unemployment. The largest growth in employment, moreover,    has been in the informal sector, which also experienced the largest fall in    real wages. <a href="#nt46"><sup>46</sup></a><a name="tx46"></a> </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Enacted as many South Africans had their gaze    riveted on TRC proceedings, GEAR was patently ill-suited to carrying out the    TRC's reparation recommendations. As Cheru rightly insists, "heavy reliance    on market forces to redress the legacies of apartheid is misguided and unsustainable    in a society marked by extreme inequality and poverty. The gulf between the    government's macro-economic policy and its social policy is glaringly apparent."<a href="#nt47"><sup>47</sup></a><a name="tx47"></a>    But the very fact that the government could defend GEAR with the language of    human rights supports Wilson's argument that human rights talk has become a    dominant form of ideological legitimization in the new South Africa, and yet    is sufficiently indiscriminate and elastic as to be able to accommodate multiple    and even radically contradictory ideological positions. It also demonstrates    Makau Mutua's important critique of human rights language as a body of "frozen    and fixed principles whose content and cultural relevance is unquestionable"and    that "prematurely cut&#91;s&#93; off debate about the political and philosophical    roots, nature, and relevance of the human rights corpus". <a href="#nt48"><sup>48</sup></a><a name="tx48"></a> </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> While the TRC can by no means be held accountable    for GEAR, I do think it is arguable that the Commission's <i>publicizing</i>    of a spiritual economy was ultimately collusive with the ANC's <i>privatizing</i>    of the literal economy. Having no force to enact its recommendations, the Commission    relied on a ritual enactment of reconciliation that, decked out in human rights    language, did more to impress international well-wishers and reassure foreign    investors than to alleviate South Africans' suffering. The TRC's emphasis on    spiritual and symbolic forms of reparation&#151;denouncing racialist attitudes,    exhibiting scenes of reconciliation and forgiveness, and celebrating a rainbow    nation&#151;has, however inadvertently, abetted the ANC's embrace of neoliberal    economics. The Commission's focus on healing the nation's soul has been at the    expense of repairing its material body; the material agony of damaged bodies,    of lack of medical care, clean water, and adequate housing, of malnutrition    and the ravages of poverty are daily experiences of suffering that were largely    lost in translation. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> In conclusion, the TRC evinces the way in which    a language of human rights makes certain forms of suffering legible, while rendering    others illegible. Its formidable powers of legitimization may incorporate certain    kinds of harm, victims, and expressions of suffering into a hegemonic tale that    makes recognition of other kinds of harm, other classes of victims, and other    modes of expressing suffering more difficult and even threatening. While the    TRC's use of the idiom of human rights enabled significant progress in correcting    a skewed historical record, acknowledging and documenting the gross human rights    violations of the apartheid regime, assigning responsibility for some of those    violations, granting dignity to victims and sometimes providing them with information,    it also functioned to disfigure the testimony of victims in a way that alienated    them from their own experience and sometimes re-traumatized them. In order to    translate traumatic testimony into statistical data and document "broad    patterns"of human rights violations, it became necessary to re-tell subversive    stories in a "controlled vocabulary", discard information that could    not be adapted to that vocabulary, treat individuals as members of (political    or racial) groups, and disregard their often complex negotiations of identity    and self-representations. Where testimony was not translated into human rights    talk, it remained primarily expressive, with little power to influence policy,    reparations, or amnesty decisions. A large body of the injustice and oppression    of apartheid was, moreover, simply not visible through the lens of human rights    language and thus remained officially unacknowledged. </font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> I have also argued that the Commission's overriding    imperatives of facilitating reconciliation and establishing a culture of human    rights were coated in a promise of healing that attended primarily to rehabilitating    the body politic rather than to healing traumatized individuals, many of whom    were asked to sacrifice their personal recovery for the nation's. That idiom    of healing, I've suggested, was also sufficiently slippery as to allow spiritual    and symbolic forms of compensation to eclipse demands for material reparations.    In inadvertent alliance with the ANC's conversion to neoliberalism, the TRC's    emphasis on healing the nation's soul undermined the task of repairing its material    body. In its translation of South African's suffering into the language of human    rights, the TRC thus sustained serious losses, among them processes of individual    psychological healing, the material repair of bodies, homes, and communities,    and alleviation of debilitating poverty. </font></p>     <p>&nbsp; </p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="3"><b>BIBLIOGRAPHY </b></font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2">ALEXANDER, N. The "Moment of Manoeuvre": "Race",    Ethnicity, and Nation in Postapartheid South Africa. In: Kaiwar, V. &amp; Mazumdar,    S. (eds.). <b>Antinomies of Modernity: Essays on Race, Orient, Nation</b>. Durham:    Duke University Press, 2003.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Amadiume, I. &amp; An-Na'im, A. (ed.).<b> The    Politics of Memory: Truth Healing and Social Justice</b>. Nova York: Zed Books,    2000.     </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Bond, P. <b>Elite Transition: From Apartheid    to Neoliberalism in South Africa</b>. Londres: Pluto Press, 2000.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Boraine, A. <b>A Country Unmasked: Inside South    Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission</b>. Oxford: Oxford University    Press, 2000.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Buford, W. &amp; van der Merwe, H. Reparations    in Southern Africa. <b>Cahiers d'&eacute;tudes africaines</b>, Johannesburg,    v. 444, n. 1-2, 2004.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Krog, A. <b>Country of my Skull: Guilt, Sorrow,    and the Limits of Forgiveness in the New South Africa</b>. Nova York: Random    House, 1998.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation    &amp; Khulumani Support Group. <b>Survivors' Perceptions of the Truth and Reconciliation    Commission and Suggestions for the Final Report</b>, 1998. Dispon&iacute;vel    em: &lt;<a href="http://www.csvr.org/za/papers/papkhul.htm" target="_blank">www.csvr.org/za/papers/papkhul.htm</a>&gt;.    &Uacute;ltimo acesso em: ago. de 2005.    </font></p>     ]]></body>
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<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> South African Press Association . "'We're on    the high road', says". <b>Independent Online</b>, &Aacute;frica do Sul, 12 de    ago. de 2005. Dispon&iacute;vel em: &lt;<a href="http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=594&art_id=qw1123851240475B22" target="_blank">http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&amp;click_id=594&amp;art_id=qw1123851240475B22</a>&gt;.    &Uacute;ltimo acesso em: 4 de out. de 2008.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Institute for Justice and Reconciliation.<b>South    African Reconciliation Barometer</b>, Cidade do Cabo, v. 2, n. 4, 2004. Dispon&iacute;vel    em: &lt;<a href="http://www.ijr.org.za/politicalanalysis/reconcbar/newsletters" target="_blank">www.ijr.org.za/politicalanalysis/reconcbar/newsletters</a>&gt;.    &Uacute;ltimo acesso em: ago. de 2005.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Kagee, A. The relationship between statement    giving at the South African Truth and Reconciliation commission and psychological    distress among former political detainees. <b>South African Journal of Psychology</b>,    &Aacute;frica do Sul, v. 36, n.1, 2006.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Kagee, A. Conducting Research with South African    Survivors of Human Rights Violations: Some Considerations. <b>International    Journal for the Advancement of Counselling</b>, Nova York, v. 26, n. 2, 2004.        </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Klaaren, J. A. Second Look at the South African    Human rights commission, Access to Information, and the Promotion of Socioeconomic    Rights. <b>Human Rights Quarterly</b>, Baltimore, v. 27, 2005.     </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Krog, A. <b>Country of my Skull: Guilt, Sorrow,    and the Limits of Forgiveness in the New South Africa</b>. Nova York: Random    House, 1998.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Mamdani, M. The Truth According to the TRC.    In: <b>The Politics of Memory</b>, Londres: Zed books, 2000.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Minow, M. The Hope for Healing: What can Truth    Commissions Do?. In: Rotberg, R.I &amp; Thompson, D. (ed.).<b> Truth v. Justice:    The Morality of Truth Commissions</b>. Princeton, 2000.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Minow, M. <b>Between Vengeance and Forgiveness:    Facing History after Genocide and Mass Violence</b>. Boston: Beacon Press, 1998.        </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Mutua, M. <b>Human Rights: A Political and Cultural    Critique</b>. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002.     </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2">NA&Ccedil;&Otilde;ES UNIDAS.<b> Declara&ccedil;&atilde;o    Universal dos Direitos Humanos</b>, Paris, 1948. Dispon&iacute;vel em: &lt;<a href="http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html" target="_blank">http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html</a>&gt;.    &Uacute;ltimo acesso em: 4 de out. de 2008.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Peet, R. Ideology, Discourse, and the Geography    of Hegemony: From Socialist to Neoliberal Development in Postapartheid South    Africa. <b>Antipode</b>, UK/US: Blackwell publishing, v. 34, n. 1, 2002.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Picker, R. Victims' Perspectives about the Human    Rights Violations Hearings. <b>Research report written for the Centre for the    Study of Violence and Reconciliation</b>, 2005. Dispon&iacute;vel em: &lt;<a href="http://www.wits.ac.za/csvr/papers/pappick.htm" target="_blank">www.wits.ac.za/csvr/papers/pappick.htm</a>&gt;.    &Uacute;ltimo acesso em: julho de 2005.    </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Reid, F. &amp; Hoffmann, D. (diretores). <b>    Long Night's Journey into Day</b> &#91;document&aacute;rio&#93;. Produzido por:    Iris Films/Cinemax Reel Life, South Village, 2000, 94 min.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> SOUTH AFRICA. Office of the President. <b>Promotion    of National Unity and Reconciliation Act. 1</b>, 1995. Dispon&iacute;vel em:    &lt;<a href="http://www.doj.gov.za/trc/legal/act9534.htm" target="_blank">http://www.doj.gov.za/trc/legal/act9534.htm</a>&gt;.    &Uacute;ltimo acesso em: julho de 2003.     </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Saunders, R. <i>Disgrace</i> in the Time of    a Truth Commission. <b>Parallax - Special Issue on Visceral Reason</b> edited    by Karyn Ball, Nova York: Routledge, v.11, n.3, 2005.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Saunders, R. <b>Lamentation and Modernity in    Literature, Philosophy, and Culture</b>. Nova York: Palgrave, 2007.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Saunders, R. Uncanny Presence: The Foreigner    at the Gate of Globalization. <b>Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and    the Middle East</b>, Durham (US): Duke University Press, v. 21, n. 2, 2001.        </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> SOUTH AFRICA.<b> Second Submission of the National    Party to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission</b>. 23 de mar. de 1997. Dispon&iacute;vel    em: &lt; <a href="http://www.doj.gov.za/trc/submit/np2.htm" target="_blank">http://www.doj.gov.za/trc/submit/np2.htm</a>&gt;.    &Uacute;ltimo acesso em: set. de 2008.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> SOUTH AFRICA.<b> Truth and Reconciliation Commission    of South Africa Report</b>. Truth and Reconciliation Commission: Cidade do Cabo,    v. 1, 1998.     </font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> SOUTH AFRICA.<b> Truth and Reconciliation Commission    of South Africa Report</b>. Truth and Reconciliation Commission: Cidade do Cabo,    v. 5, 1998.     </font></p>     <!-- ref --><p><font face="Verdana" size="2"> Wilson, R.A. <b>The Politics of Truth and Reconciliation    in South Africa</b>. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.     </font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="3"><b>NOTES</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt1"></a><a href="#tx1">1</a>. </b>FELMAN,    S. &amp; LAUB, D. <b>Testimony: Crises of Witnessing in Literature, Psychoanalysis,    and History</b>. New York: Routledge, 1992, p. 5.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt2"></a><a href="#tx2">2</a>. </b>The    former example is drawn from Nomonde Calata's testimony in: REID, F. &amp; HOFFMANN,    D. (directors). <b>Long Night's Journey into Day </b>&#91;documentary&#93;.    Production of: Iris Films/Cinemax Reel Life, South Village, 2000, 94 minutes.    The latter from an anonymous testimony recorded in: KROG, A. <b>Country of my    Skull: Guilt, Sorrow, and the Limits of Forgiveness in the New South Africa</b>.    New York: Random House, 1998, p. 40.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt3"></a><a href="#tx3">3</a>. </b>On    the differences between truth commissions and criminal trials, see HAYNER, P.    <b>Unspeakable Truths: Facing the Challenge of Truth Commissions</b>. New York:    Routledge, 2002, chaps. 7 and 13; and MINOW, M. The Hope for Healing: What can    Truth Commissions Do?. In: ROTBERG, R.I &amp; THOMPSON. D. (ed.). <b>Truth v.    Justice: The Morality of Truth Commissions</b>. Princeton, 2000, p. 235-260.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt4"></a><a href="#tx4">4</a>. </b>GUTMANN,    A. &amp; THOMPSON, D. The Moral Foundations of Truth Commissions. In: ROTBERG,    R.I &amp; THOMPSON. D. (ed.). <b>Truth v. Justice: The Morality of Truth Commissions</b>.    Princeton, 2000, p. 5.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt5"></a><a href="#tx5">5</a>. </b>WILSON,    R.A. <b>The Politics of Truth and Reconciliation in South Africa</b>. Cambridge:    Cambridge University Press, 2001, p. 38. While the TRC officially recognized    four kinds of truth&#151;factual or forensic; personal or narrative; social    or dialogic; and healing and restorative&#151;theseforms of truth were rarely    brought into dialogue with each other, and it was ultimately forensic truth    that was judged of the greatest epistemological value. See SOUTH AFRICA. <b>Truth    and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report</b>. Truth and Reconciliation    Commission: </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">Cape Town, v. 1, 1998, p. 110-114.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt6"></a><a href="#tx6">6</a>. </b>Many    South Africans saw amnesty as an obstruction of their right to a fair trial    and the families of Steve Biko and Griffiths Mxenge et. al. legally, albeit    unsuccessfully, challenged its constitutionality. While the Commission was perceived    as handing out a better deal to perpetrators than to victims, the vast majority    of amnesty applications were, in fact, denied (5,287 </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">denied    to 568 granted).</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt7"></a><a href="#tx7">7</a>. </b>See    TRC Report, 1998, v. 1, p. 185; TRC Report, 1998, v. 5, p. 225-6; and SOUTH    AFRICA. <b>Second Submission of the National Party to the Truth and Reconciliation    Commission</b>. 23 Mar. 1997. Available at: &lt; <a href="http://www.doj.gov.za/trc/submit/np2.htm" target="_blank">http://www.doj.gov.za/trc/submit/np2.htm</a>&gt;.    Last accessed on: Sept. 2008.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt8"></a><a href="#tx8">8</a>. </b>TRC    Report, 1998, v. 1, p. 2.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt9"></a><a href="#tx9">9</a>. </b>Ibid,    p. 158-164 and Wilson, 2001, ch. 2.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt10"></a><a href="#tx10">10</a>.    </b>MINOW, 2000, p. 245.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt11"></a><a href="#tx11">11</a>.    </b>Qtd. Wilson, 2001, p. 46.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt12"></a><a href="#tx12">12</a>.    </b>See FANON, F. <b>The Wretched of the Earth </b>(trans. Constance Farrington).    New York: Grove, 1963; and Idem, <b>Black Skin, White Masks </b>(trans. Charles    Lam Markmann). New York: Grove, 1967. See also SAUNDERS, R. <b>Lamentation and    Modernity in Literature, Philosophy, and Culture</b>. New York: Palgrave, 2007,    p. 13-15.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt13"></a><a href="#tx13">13</a>.    </b>MINOW, M. <b>Between Vengeance and Forgiveness: Facing History after Genocide    and Mass Violence</b>. Boston: Beacon Press, 1998, p. </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">61.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt14"></a><a href="#tx14">14</a>.    </b>This language is drawn from the United Nations: UNITED NATIONS. <b>Universal    Declaration of Human Rights, </b>1948. Available at &lt;<b><a href="http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html" target="_blank">http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html</a></b>&gt;.    Last </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">accessed on: Aug. 2005.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt15"></a><a href="#tx15">15</a>.    </b>Ibid.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt16"></a><a href="#tx16">16</a>.    </b>MINOW, 2000, p. 246.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt17"></a><a href="#tx17">17</a>.    </b>WILSON, 2001, p. 86.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt18"></a><a href="#tx18">18</a>.    </b>Ibid, p. 111.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt19"></a><a href="#tx19">19</a>.    </b>A further problem with this construction, as Wilson and others have pointed    out, is the moral equalizing of pain, which sometimes met with fierce resistance    at HRV hearings. See WILSON, 2001, p. 111-114.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt20"></a><a href="#tx20">20</a>.    </b>MERTUS, J. Truth in a Box: The Limits of Justice through Judicial Mechanisms.    In: AMADIUME, I. &amp; AN-NA'IM, A. (ed.). <b>The Politics of Memory: Truth    Healing and Social Justice</b>. New York: Zed Books, 2000, p. 142-150. On the    translation of visceral testimony into abstract value, disembodied meaning,    and immaterial recovery, see also SAUNDERS, R. Disgrace in the Time of a Truth    Commission.<b> Parallax - Special Issue on Visceral Reason</b>, New York, Routledge,    v.11, n.3, 2005, p. 99-106.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt21"></a><a href="#tx21">21</a>.    </b>Qtd. WILSON, 2001, p. 121.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt22"></a><a href="#tx22">22</a>.    </b>GUTMAN &amp; THOMPSON, 2000, p. 30.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt23"></a><a href="#tx23">23</a>.    </b>KAGEE, A. Conducting Research with South African Survivors of Human Rights    Violations: Some Considerations. <b>International Journal for the Advancement    of Counselling</b>, New York, v. 26, n. 2, 2004, p. 196. See also KAGEE, A.    The relationship between statement giving at the South African Truth and Reconciliation    commission and psychological distress among former political detainees. <b>South    African Journal of Psychology</b>, </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">South    Africa, v. 36, n. 1, 2006, p. 10-24.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt24"></a><a href="#tx24">24</a>.    </b>PICKER, R. Victims' Perspectives about the Human Rights Violations Hearings.    <b>Research report written for the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation</b>,    2005. Available at: &lt;<b><a href="http://www.wits.ac.za/csvr/papers/pappick.htm" target="_blank">www.wits.ac.za/csvr/papers/pappick.htm</a></b>&gt;.    Last accessed on: July 2005. Similar results are arrived at by HAMBER, B.; NAGENG,    D. &amp; O'MALLEY, G. ‘Telling it Like it Is (…)': understanding the truth and    reconciliation commission from the perspective of survivors. <b>Psychology in    Society</b>, </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">Congella (South Africa), v.    26, 2000, p. 18-42.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt25"></a><a href="#tx25">25</a>.    </b>Qtd. WILSON, 2001, p. 22.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt26"></a><a href="#tx26">26</a>.    </b>See HAMBER, B. Repairing the Irreparable: Dealing with Double-binds of Making    Reparations </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">for Crimes of the Past. <b>Ethnicity    and Health</b>, New </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">York: Routledge, v.    5 n. 3-4, 2000, p. 215-226.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt27"></a><a href="#tx27">27</a>.    </b>EWICK, P. &amp; SILBEY, S. S. Subversive Stories and Hegemonic Tales: Toward    a Sociology of Narrative. <b>Law &amp; Society Review, </b>University of </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">Massachusetts,    v. 29, n. 2, 1995, p. 1.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt28"></a><a href="#tx28">28</a>.    </b>EWICK &amp; SILBEY, 1995, p. 214.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt29"></a><a href="#tx29">29</a>.    </b>Ibid, p. 219.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt30"></a><a href="#tx30">30</a>.    </b>SOUTH AFRICA. Office of the President.<b> Promotion of National Unity and    Reconciliation Act. 1</b>, 1995. Available at: &lt;<b><a href="http://www.doj.gov.za/trc/legal/act9534.htm" target="_blank">http://</a></b></font><a href="http://www.doj.gov.za/trc/legal/act9534.htm" target="_blank"><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b>www.doj.gov.za/trc/legal/act9534.htm</b></font></a><font face="Verdana" size="2">&gt;.    Last </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">accessed on: July 2003.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt31"></a><a href="#tx31">31</a>.    </b>MAMDANI, M. The Truth According to the TRC. In: AMADIUME, I., and AN-NA'IM,    A. (eds.), <b>The Politics of Memory</b>. London: Zed Books, p. 177-78. Neville    Alexander develops a related and equally important point, arguing that the TRC's    dogma of nonracialism functioned as an instrument of the bourgeoisie, obscuring    and impeding the class interests of workers. See ALEXANDER, N. The ‘Moment of    Manoeuvre': ‘Race,' Ethnicity, and Nation in Postapartheid South Africa. In:    KAIWAR, V. &amp; MAZUMDAR, S. (eds.). <b>Antinomies of Modernity: Essays on    Race, Orient, Nation</b>. Durham (US): Duke University Press, 2003, p. 180-195.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt32"></a><a href="#tx32">32</a>.    </b>MAMDANI, 2000, p. 180.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt33"></a><a href="#tx33">33</a>.    </b>Ibid, p. 181.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt34"></a><a href="#tx34">34</a>.    </b>Ibid, p.182.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt35"></a><a href="#tx35">35</a>.    </b>TRC Report, 1998, v. 5, p. 68.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt36"></a><a href="#tx36">36</a>.    </b>See Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation &amp; Khulumani    Support Group.<b> Survivors' Perceptions of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission    and Suggestions for the Final Report</b>, 1998. Available at: &lt;<b><a href="http://www.csvr.org/za/papers/papkhul.htm" target="_blank">www.csvr.org/za/papers/papkhul.htm</a></b>&gt;.    Last accessed on: Aug. 2005. See also BORAINE, A. <b>A Country Unmasked: Inside    South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission</b>. Oxford: Oxford University    Press, 2000, p. 333-339.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt37"></a><a href="#tx37">37</a>.    </b>Qtd BUFORD, W. &amp; van der Merwe, H. </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">Reparations    in Southern Africa. <b>Cahiers d'études </b></font><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b>africaines</b>,    Johannesburg, v. 444, n. 1-2, 2004.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt38"></a><a href="#tx38">38</a>.    </b>TRC Report, 1998, v. 5, p. 174-5.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt39"></a><a href="#tx39">39</a>.    </b>EVANS, T. International Human Rights Law as Power/Knowledge. <b>Human Rights    Quarterly</b>, </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">Baltimore, v. 27, 2005,    p. 1057.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt40"></a><a href="#tx40">40</a>.    Universal Declaration of Human Rights</b>, 1948. It is perhaps worth noting    that Section 184(3) of the South African constitution includes rights of access    to housing, water, nutrition, and health that have been successfully litigated    through the Constitutional Court in three recent cases. See KLAAREN, J. A Second    Look at the South African Human rights commission, Access to Information, and    the Promotion of Socioeconomic Rights. <b>Human Rights Quarterly</b>, </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">Baltimore,    v. 27, 2005, p. 539-561.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt41"></a><a href="#tx41">41</a>.    </b>PEET, R. Ideology, Discourse, and the Geography of Hegemony: From Socialist    to Neoliberal Development in Postapartheid South Africa. <b>Antipode</b>, UK/US:    Blackwell publishing, v. </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">34, n. 1, 2002,    p. 58.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt42"></a><a href="#tx42">42</a>.    </b>For an elaboration of this critique of the language of transnational financial    institutions, see SAUNDERS, R. Uncanny Presence: The Foreigner at the Gate of    Globalization.<b> Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East</b>,    Durham (US): Duke University </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">Press, v.    21, n. 2, 2001, p. 88-98.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt43"></a><a href="#tx43">43</a>.    </b>Following consultations with President Thabo Mbeki in 2000, both the World    Bank and IMF gave the ANC government high marks on its macroeconomic policy,    advising it to intensify the pace of reform through reduced government spending,    increased wage restraint, and abrogation of the labor law. The World Bank has    been giving South Africa policy advice since the early 1990s and before leaving    office, De Klerk commissioned numerous "planning documents" that, as Patrick    Bond has shown, not only emphasized stability, resisting populist pressure,    achieving consensus, but became a discursive device for implanting long term    neoliberal economic ideas. See BOND, P.<b> Elite Transition: From Apartheid    to Neoliberalism in South Africa</b>. London: Pluto Press, 2000.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt44"></a><a href="#tx44">44</a>.    </b>South African Press Association. "‘We're on the high road', says". <b>Independent    Online</b>, South Africa, 12 Aug. 2005. Available at: &lt;<a href="http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=594&art_id=qw1123851240475B22" target="_blank">http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&amp;click_id=594&amp;art_id=qw1123851240475B22</a>&gt;.    Last accessed on: 4 Oct. 2008.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt45"></a><a href="#tx45">45</a>.    </b>See BOND, 2000; Peet, 2002 and Cheru, F. Overcoming apartheid's legacy:    the Ascendancy of </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">Neoliberalism in South    Africa's anti-poverty </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">strategy. <b>Third    World Quarterly</b>, London, v. 22, n. </font><font face="Verdana" size="2">4,    2001, p. 505-527.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt46"></a><a href="#tx46">46</a>.    </b>See Institute for Justice and Reconciliation.<b> South African Reconciliation    Barometer</b>, Cape Town, v. 2, n. 4, 2004. Available at: &lt;<a href="http://www.ijr.org.za/politicalanalysis/reconcbar/newsletters" target="_blank">www.ijr.org.za/politicalanalysis/reconcbar/</a></font><a href="http://www.ijr.org.za/politicalanalysis/reconcbar/newsletters"><font face="Verdana" size="2">newsletters</font></a><font face="Verdana" size="2">&gt;.    Last accessed on: Aug. 2005.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt47"></a><a href="#tx47">47</a>.    </b>CHERU, 2001, p. 521.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b><a name="nt48"></a><a href="#tx48">48</a>.    </b>MUTUA, M. <b>Human Rights: A Political and Cultural Critique</b>. Philadelphia:    University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002, p. 4.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana" size="2"><b>REBECCA SAUNDERS</b></font>    <br>   <font face="Verdana" size="2">Rebecca Saunders teaches global literatures, theory,    and African studies at Illinois State University. Her publications include <i>Lamentation    and Modernity in Literature, Philosophy and Culture</i>, <i>The Concept of the    Foreign: An Interdisciplinary Dialogue</i>, and numerous articles. She is currently    writing a book on truth commissions entitled "Scenes of Interrogation: Literature,    Philosophy, and the Challenge of Justice". </font></p>      ]]></body><back>
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