Arts & International Affairs: Volume 2, Issue 1 | Page 37

use is difficult to reconcile with testimony’s noninstrumentality: the testimony of a moral witness is intrinsically valuable; it is an end in itself. It is intrinsically valuable although, or because, it is not dependent on factual truth. Reporting factual truth is what political witnesses do; moral witnesses testify to what it felt like to be subjected to evil. Such testimony possesses intrinsic value independent of the question of whether it is factually correct or not. Thus, journalists, owing to their dedication to factual truth, would seem to be inclined toward the subject position of a political witness; artists, on the other hand, might be expected to be closer to the subject position of a moral witness because works of art do not normally claim factual accuracy. Indeed, as Bennett (����:�) explains, with regard to works of art “faithful translation of testimony” is not what matters; rather, what matters is art’s use of its “unique capacities to contribute actively to [the] politics [of testimony].” There is, however, an overlap between the political witness and the moral witness. The artist as witness and intermediary Elsewhere, I analyzed Botelho’s work in light of the question of what it does to transform spectators into participant witnesses who self-critically engage with a work of art and the conditions depicted in it, including their own involvement in and responsibility for these conditions (Möller ����:���–���). In the present article, I am interested in both reading Botelho’s work in light of Margalit’s understanding of the moral witness and thinking about Margalit’s understanding of the moral witness in light of Botelho’s works of art. Obviously, Botelho does not qualify as a paradigmatic moral witness as he does not possess knowledge-by-acquaintance of suffering. It is precisely the lack of such knowledge that motivated his work on the colonial wars in the first place. But observers can suffer, and they can be moral witnesses, too, on the conditions outlined earlier. To begin with, then, I need to make two alterations in Margalit’s concept extending what it means to be a witness. First, I want to detach his concept from cases of unmitigated evil and suggest that it be used to theorize any political regime inflicting major suffering on people. I have three reasons for doing so. I am not an expert on the religious and philosophical background from which Margalit derives his understanding of unmitigated evil; I think that his concept is too important to limit its application to such cases; and I am interested in the question of what we can learn about cases of lesser evil when we look at them through approaches and concepts developed in connection with the unmitigated evil of the Holocaust. Remember that the Holocaust nowadays serves as the model for memory construction in other cases as well (Wieviorka); concepts 36