| Threads of Justice | by Kate Jones | ||||||||||||||
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A Knight Never Goes Out Without a Coat of Chivalry |
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This is part of a longer treatise on knighthood and chivalry, written in the last years of the 13th century by Ramon Lull, a knight who later underwent a series of visions and became a lay Franciscan. In it he details the various parts of a knights equipage and what each part stands for; the entry on the surcote was the one which appealed to me. The duties of a knight included the protection of those weaker than him as well as the duty to serve his master by martial means. Lull as well as Geoffroi de Charny (another chivalric author, writing in the mid 1300s) were very clear that this would at times involve personal discomfort and indeed danger; Charny was emphatic on his opinions of knights who slept late in soft beds, ate rich food, and indulged in other such unnecessary comforts. Contrariwise he was fulsome in his praise of those who were willing to undergo physical discomfort:
Many of the accoutrements of a knight the sword, signifying justice; the hauberk, signifying strength against vices; the spurs, signifying diligence and speed carry over well into our modern lives. Justice is still justice, though its carried out differently; diligence is as important in the most mundane of modern jobs as it was for the knight in the height of the Middle Ages. But the surcoat? What of that? There are indeed times still when its necessary to go through some physical discomfort, indeed danger, to do the thing thats right. The soldiers on the front lines in Iraq; police officers and firefighters everywhere. But for most of us, the necessity the opportunity to put ourselves in danger for someone elses sake come rarely enough. Perhaps, then, whats needed is not so much the willingness to endure physical as emotional discomfort the willingness to risk mockery and disdain to stand up for the unpopular person, the unpopular opinion, the unpopular stand: as long as that stand is the one thats right. The courage to go to your manager at work to confirm someone elses testimonial that she was sexually harassed; the nerve to go to the teacher, or a counselor, to tell them what you know about the bomb threat that emptied school out last week. The audacity to stand up to someone making bigoted comments and tell them that theyre wrong, even though you know perfectly well that everyone else theyre talking to agrees with them and youll just get laughed at, or worse. Or worse was the fate Martin Luther King, Jr. faced in his stand against injustice. Even before his April 4, 1968 assassination, he faced arrest and death threats, violence directed against his marches, and at one point his house was bombed. But he kept up in his strategy of nonviolence and continued to march despite the death threats. Nonviolent civil disobedience was the strategy embraced by Mohandan Gandhi as well, not only in his well-known quest to free India from British domination but also in his involvement in the civil rights movement in South Africa. His principles inspired Martin Luther King, Jr. as well as Steven Biko and Aung San Suu Kyi. And he, too, was assassinated, on January 30, 1948. We dont all have to aspire to such great heights. Just doing the little things extending the hand of friendship to someone whos different or standing up next to them when theyre facing injustice makes a difference. I have a hard time with this; its a thing Im working on. Plain and simple, Im afraid of getting laughed at, or worse. I can sit down and think about it, and know that Im pretty unlikely to get beat up; and that if I do get laughed at, well, thats their problem, not mine, and I can survive a little laughter. Its still tough. I don't always have the nerve to speak up. But sometimes I reach out and pull my surcote closer around me, and then I can speak what's on my mind. And when I do? Ive heard people say yeah, shes right and yeah, thats a nasty thing to say and maybe this isnt the kind of conversation to be having here. And then Ive accomplished two things Ive stopped someone saying bigoted things, and Ive done a bit to convince myself that I can. Charny spends quite a bit of time after the above quote going on about those who, through overly pampering their bodies, come to fear possible physical harm a little too much.
I suspect that in the same way the overly-strong avoidance of conflict will make one fear any conflict at all, even when its the best thing to do. I know Ive had that problem, and its been a lot of work getting to the point where I can say anything. But I put on that surcote; I pull it close around me to protect me from those whod do me harm. And to remind me that sometimes it wont protect me, and its my duty to face those hardships anyway, in order to honor chivalry and do the right thing.
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© 2007 Kate Jones |
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