The Jain community, espcially of the Shwetambar sect, has a very interesting custom. Every Bhadrapada Chaturthi, that is on the Ganesh Chaturthi, they have the "michchami duggadam" day. The expression means 'forgive me for the unintentional hurt that my words or actions might have caused you.' It is indeed a wonderful concept. At times, due to stress, may be, we might unknowingly, unintentionally hurt someone, and it is but basic decency to ask for forgiveness for that minor mistake.
Should, however, conscious and vicious ill-treatment for decades on end be forgiven? Such villainy, moreover, refuses to stop because the crook of a perpetrator (and his minions, the gang/mafia, however much may they pretend to be gooood and decent) enjoys the ill-treatment! Should it be forgiven?
Should conscious black magic intended to ill-treat be forgiven? Should the conscious ganging up to ruin a brilliant career, through subtle viciousness born out of jealousy and malice, be forgiven? Should vicious most ugly canards knowingly spread to tarnish an innocent reputation so as to cover up one's own ugly meannesses and pervert practices be forgiven?
Sure these are rhetorical questions because the only answer to such blocking ( or is it blacking?) out of a person's very existence to suit one's own lust for power-n-control, for gossiping endlessly, for one's hidden desires of the worst variety, for hiding one's total dislike of certain individuals in one's own life is that all such wickedness-es can and never should be forgiven, no, not even by the gods!
What must the victim of such deliberate targeting and conscious injustice do? Surely not forgive it because that entire undeserved suffering is a joke to the perpetrators to be laughed at, a time-pass that they continue to find funny!
Better forget it out of one's conscious mind so that one goes on as per one's ideals and principles, and attains the dreams that are so valuable to one's own self. Equally it is important, I suppose, to believe in the justice that governs the universe, and which makes one's good wishes absolutely potent! Equally important it is to never ever be like the self-obsessed perpetrator(s) because the victim's plight and pain are truly intimately known!
Pratima@To forgive conscious vicious targeting is foolish. To continue most honorably despite it is divine!
Instead of turning the other cheek, better get away from the range of the hand, however long it may imagine itself to be!