FROM THE DESK OF KATE SINKINS: BEARING WITNESS

From the Desk of Kate Sinkins: Bearing Witness

 

The phrase “bearing witness” has been used many times since Inauguration Day 2025. For some, bearing witness means providing evidence or testimony about something, often to support or prove a claim. It can also mean sharing personal experiences, particularly traumatic ones, with those around you. In my life, bearing witness often means acknowledging and validating experiences or events, in an effort to show that something is true. The Bible even explains the phrase as a Jewish legal principle, namely that uncorroborated testimony does not count as truth. In John 5:31-32, it is written, “If I bear witness about myself, my witness is not true. There is another who bears witness about me, and I know that the witness which he witnesses about me is true.” 

Elie Wiesel, in his famous novel about the trauma inflicted by the Holocaust, Night, described the vital reason being witness is necessary. He said, “for the dead and the living, we must bear witness,” implying not does it validate an event occurred, but it can also lead to healing trauma. Members of 12-step recovery programs share stories not to validate pain, but to process an experience though words, actions, and physical presence. Sharing trauma with others opens up a space where there once was none. Bearing witness also demonstrates that one understands the often-repeated warning-that those who do not learn from the mistakes of history are bound to repeat those mistakes.

At funerals, we share stories of the deceased, knowing that a person is never truly forgotten when others keep their memories alive. As an immigration attorney for 25+ years, I have had to bear witness to young children being separated from their parents at the border, to horrific conditions inside federally-funded immigration detention centers, to working with four political appointees in four years serving as Director of the Office of Refugee Resettlement and more recently, to watching my community on the Oregon coast come together to voice their opposition to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility from being built in Newport, Oregon.

As a country, we have a front row seat to thousands of people across the nation who are bearing witness daily to immigration enforcement across the United States. Minneapolis, Chicago, Portland, Washington DC., New Orleans, and Los Angeles residents have had to bear witness merely because they live in large cities that mostly voted against the current president. 

As we go through our day, we must ask ourselves, “how will I bear witness today and what will I tell my children about my actions during this period in history?” For books will be written, and movies made, about the actions of so many people in the United States who were not afraid to stand up and bear witness.

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