"Some may seek revenge, but this is not our policy"
About this Quote
“Some may seek revenge, but this is not our policy” is the kind of sentence that tries to do three jobs at once: cool a boiling public mood, reassure anxious opponents, and set a moral frame for what comes next. Joe Slovo, speaking from the charged terrain of South Africa’s negotiated transition, isn’t denying the desire for payback; he’s naming it. That first clause concedes a combustible reality: after decades of apartheid violence, revenge is not a hypothetical temptation but a social force. By acknowledging it upfront, Slovo preempts critics who might dismiss calls for restraint as naive or detached.
The pivot - “but this is not our policy” - is where the real work happens. Slovo shifts the conversation from emotion to governance. “Policy” is cold, institutional language, and that’s the point: it signals that the movement aspiring to rule will be bound by discipline, not impulse. It’s also a message aimed across the divide. To those invested in the old order, the line functions as a guarantee that political change won’t automatically mean personal annihilation. That assurance isn’t sentimental; it’s strategic, designed to lower the stakes enough to make compromise possible.
The subtext is hard-edged: justice will be pursued, but not as vengeance; legitimacy will be built, but not through humiliation. In a moment when a single retaliatory spiral could have derailed democracy itself, Slovo’s sentence acts like a seal on the future, insisting that the new state must be constructed with restraint as a founding principle.
The pivot - “but this is not our policy” - is where the real work happens. Slovo shifts the conversation from emotion to governance. “Policy” is cold, institutional language, and that’s the point: it signals that the movement aspiring to rule will be bound by discipline, not impulse. It’s also a message aimed across the divide. To those invested in the old order, the line functions as a guarantee that political change won’t automatically mean personal annihilation. That assurance isn’t sentimental; it’s strategic, designed to lower the stakes enough to make compromise possible.
The subtext is hard-edged: justice will be pursued, but not as vengeance; legitimacy will be built, but not through humiliation. In a moment when a single retaliatory spiral could have derailed democracy itself, Slovo’s sentence acts like a seal on the future, insisting that the new state must be constructed with restraint as a founding principle.
Quote Details
| Topic | Forgiveness |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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