We are all more than the worst thing we’ve ever done
“Margulies tells the stories of people who have done monstrous things but are not monsters, are not forever defined by their worst acts. He writes beautifully of pain and loss, but also of redemption and transformation. . . . A wonderfully hopeful book about what it means to be human.”—Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking
In Cast Out, civil rights lawyer Joseph Margulies insists that those who commit even the most heinous crimes are one of us and should be judged in a spirit of forgiveness. He explains that American society is too often unforgiving, preferring to cast out those we consider irredeemable by fixating narrowly on the question, “What did they do?”, and imagining that those who have done great wrongs have no past worth learning and no future worth preserving.
But judgment in a forgiving spirit demands that we ask, “What happened?” What brought a human being to this place. Through intimate interviews, his rich chapters bring to life 6 men and women, sharing their (sometimes brutal) crimes, the grim but all-too-human paths that led them there, and their evolution and insights.
Eye-opening and unflinching, Cast Out makes us truly see those society locks away—the so-called “worst of the worst.” It challenges the reader to see us in them and them in us, and in that way, to recognize the humanity we all share.
“This is the book I’ve been waiting for. Margulies tells the stories of people who have done monstrous things but are not monsters, are not forever defined by their worst acts. He writes beautifully of pain and loss but also of redemption and transformation. He crisply gives the reader the big facts we need but without abstractions or generalizations; instead, we are given unique stories that made me say, ‘Ah yes, I know this soul.’ This is a wonderfully hopeful book about what it means to be human, and I can’t think of a more important lesson for our time.”
—Sister Helen Prejean, best-selling author of Dead Man Walking: The Eyewitness Account of the Death Penalty That Sparked a National Debate
“Joe Margulies’s Cast Out is a small miracle of a book. In telling the heartrending stories of those cast out, Margulies gently prods us to find ourselves in them, to see the humanity in those we’ve written off. This book, filled with grace, is a cri de coeur, one so essential for this moment, a plea to become a more empathetic and forgiving society.”
—Alex Kotlowitz, author of An American Summer
“Cast Out is a courageous and morally necessary book for this moment. We are living through a protracted war on the poor where, although we have the resources to end poverty, death by poverty, detainment without due process, and policy violence is the norm. In his latest book, Joe Margulies pushes readers to confront the human cost of these unforgiving and violent yet-to-be United States—one that too quickly casts people as irredeemable ‘others’ while letting powers and principalities do as they please. Through unflinching stories and honest questions, Margulies calls us to reckon with pain, power, accountability, and the sacred truth that no one is defined solely by the worst thing they have ever done. This book challenges us to imagine a society rooted not in vengeance and violence but in mercy, justice, and our shared humanity. As a liberationist pastor and theologian, I find this book rooted in the kind of forgiveness and repentance that the Bible teaches.”
—The Reverend Dr. Liz Theoharis, co-author of You Only Get What You’re Organized to Take
Joseph Margulies’s Cast Out: A Call for a Forgiving Society in an Age of Incarceration
Readers’ Guide Discussion Questions
Download the discussion guide.
- In his introduction, Joseph Margulies writes that the United States has become “unrecognizable” to him, which he traces to a cultural celebration of cruelty. “Yes, as a country we have been cruel many times before, and yes, not everyone behaves this way. But I can’t think of a time when so many people were so enthusiastically cruel, and when this enthusiasm for viciousness had achieved such cultural dominance.” What do you think of this diagnosis? Has an “enthusiasm for viciousness” achieved “cultural dominance” in the United States?
- At the center of Cast Out is the idea of a forgiving society, which he describes as more of a perspective than a set of rules. He says that judgment in a forgiving spirit “produces an orientation, a way of understanding society and its members, which includes those who betray it as much as those betrayed by it. This orientation takes its shape from the countless interactions between transgressors and the society that would hold them to account. An observer who knew nothing of a forgiving society would watch these interactions and say that this is a people that does not judge until it first struggles to understand. It does not dwell excessively on either the failings of the individual or the society of which she is a part. Instead, it accepts the challenge of understanding and giving effect to the tangled history that binds each to the other, for in meeting this challenge, the forgiving society reveals and honors the shared humanity of all who live within it.” How would society change if it judged wrongdoers in this spirit? How would your own life change?
- Margulies uses the treatment of Klete Keller by the New York Times to introduce the idea of a forgiving society. Yet Keller’s crime, for which he was pardoned, was much less serious than that of the 6 people Margulies profiles in Cast Out. Does this detract from his idea? Can a case be made that society should judge Keller in a “spirit of forgiveness” but not the others?
- Margulies insists there is a difference between an explanation and an excuse—“one accounts while the other absolves”—and that the 6 histories he relates are meant to explain rather than excuse the crimes that took place. Are you persuaded by this distinction, or do you think Margulies is actually trying to excuse what occurred? Do you think these histories excuse the crimes that followed?
- One theme that runs through Cast Out is the transformative power of education: Eric Matthews graduated from the Seminary at Angola; Richard Rivera, who was illiterate when he got to prison, ended up getting several advanced degrees behind bars; Lucas Whaley attended college courses through the Cornell Prison Education Program. What do you see as the connection between education and a forgiving society?
- Another theme in Cast Out is empathy and the power of loss. Lucas Whaley began to feel the enormity of his crime after the death of his girlfriend; David Medina’s transformation began after the death of his daughter; for Richard Rivera, the pivotal moment began with his time in the AIDS ward at Greenhaven. Yet some people attack empathy as producing a mindless compassion for those who do not deserve it. What do you think: Does empathy contribute to a forgiving society, or does it lead us astray?
- Though Margulies profiles people who have committed serious crimes, his hope for a forgiving society goes beyond the treatment of people in prison. “A bloated carceral state is a symptom of an unforgiving society, but it is not the sickness. When I decry the determination to cast people out and imprison them in their past, I do not mean simply the 2 million people behind bars or the 5 million under carceral supervision, or even the tens of millions who have a criminal record. Imprisonment takes many forms, and no one needs to spend a night in jail to feel the sting of an unforgiving society; degradation, humiliation, and ostracism have more in common with incarceration than many people care to acknowledge.” If you were writing a follow-up to Cast Out that took its ideas beyond criminal justice, who would you profile and why?
- Margulies says his goal is to encourage people “to see us in them and them in us”? Can you recognize yourself in someone who has done a great wrong?
- Who or what is your whatabout?