International Journal on Criminology Volume 4, Number 2, Winter 2016 | Page 63

Know What You Are Fighting bear witness, to bring forth an otherwise unspeakable truth about him- or herself. For example: “I don’t accept it, even if I can’t get rid of it! You won’t get me, despite your power!” This message is addressed to someone close, like a real or symbolic father: to the family, to friends, to society, in a psychological process of transposition by projection. The image of power, of the state, becomes the target, with the transference of aggressive feelings coming from the similarity between real and symbolic power. The suicidal act ensures a psychological function of a reparative, punitive (of the other or oneself), or vindictive “ordeal.” The criminogenic masses suggest to the suicide candidate that the only way out, the only escape, is suicide, the unspeakable to be saved is often connected to the couple dignity-humiliation. Even guilt, a powerful motor of processes of selfdepreciation, sees the dignity acting there as a reparative process. Acting on the environment by attacking one’s own life: this is how “Being” in its various attributions and manifestations imposes itself on common, social, and moral values. “Being” does not mean only living in the biological sense; blowing oneself up also expresses this “Being”: a way of existing beyond the dominant reason by defying it. Candidates for suicide attacks are not desperate, but on the contrary, tragic actors, motivated by the conviction that their deadly sacrifice will support their cause. Differences Between the Two Forms of Suicide Criminal suicide, or “suicide attack,” since other people are victims, differs in many ways from suicide that does not harm others. In a suicide attack, the candidate suffers external pressures through indoctrination that reinforce a preexisting suicidal tendency and facilitate the passage into action. Physically inoffensive for others, the aim for a solitary suicide is psychological offense. While there are pressures, they are unconscious and come from the soul of the suicidal person, even if, for that person, they come from another or others. Self-destruction to merge with the universe is symbolic of inoffensive suicide. In a suicide attack, the notion of destruction is patent, highly visible, and materialized in the form of a real explosion: it is a question of negating the environment, fusing with the other in the explosion, embracing existence by means of violent action. And while this notion goes beyond the simplistic formula and theories on pathology, it cannot be reduced to a nihilist theory. The concept of “nirvana,” the search for absolute peace, omit in this case some aspects related to how language functions. Coming back without preconceptions to the salient aspects of the phenomenon, as phenomenology teaches us, shows that a “suicide attack” is not a detachment, a disinterest in the positive aspects of life. Far from being a demission, suicide attacks actively participate in the persistent status of “being there”; it confirms its power without authorization from anyone, no matter what its power or role, father, state, or anything that symbolizes authority. 62