The personal is political,
the political is personal
I consider myself a privileged woman in many ways. I get to work with amazing people
and travel to places all over Europe, meeting smart, funny, and kind people. I have
two healthy children, I studied at university, and I have many friends who are there
for me whenever I need them and vice versa.
But my life started out differently. My father is from Algeria, born on 21 November,
1954, 20 days after the start of the war of independence against France. My mother
is from a Christian family in the south of the Netherlands, she was the 7th daughter
of 10 children, when all my grandparents wanted was a boy. So here are two people,
neglected in their early childhood, who came together. Ultimately this led to my
mother in the hospital and my father being sent to prison for a couple of years when
I was six years old.
You would think that justice was done. She survived and my father was punished. I
remember a police officer that day saying to me, to comfort me, ‘do not worry, your
father will be sent to a place far away from society’. This terrified me. I believed
they would let him fall off the earth. In a way they did. Because for the next five
years I saw my father only a few times. I am now 39 years old, and it is 33 years
since my father was sent to prison. But the repercussions of how we deal with
injustice in society I still feel today.
However sad the story of my parents might be, it is not a unique story. There are so
many more stories like theirs. Their story is part of patterns of injustice. My
father was a child born and raised in war, like many children in the world today,
Sudan, Palestine, Congo and many more. Social and political injustice creates
collective trauma that leads to personal trauma. So my way to deal with this is to
work towards a different future in our criminal justice system. That is why I work
for RESCALED.
A detention house itself is part of the fabric of the city, part of all the
ecosystems in the city. As human beings, we belong to many ecosystems in
communities; schools, work, sports, cultural activities, and more. A detention house
is not just an architectural replacement to a prison , it is a different answer to
justice being done in society. Not by removing an individual from society, but by
doing the opposite, including a person into every fibre of society, making sure that
whenever possible the person in a detention house will be part of every ecosystem in
communities.
This means society and communities itself must become a place of justice. Our cities
must become restorative. Not only the individuals in detention houses need to heal
the injustice they might have done to people in communities, but the ecosystems in
cities must also heal from the injustice they have inflicted onto their communities.
I am talking about the lack of social housing, the underperformance of schools in
certain neighbourhoods for years,, I am talking about capitalist systems of which
often poor people are the victims, of which the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017 in the
United Kingdom is an example. The Prime Minister Keir Starmer said this about it;
“It should never have happened. The country failed to discharge its most
fundamental duty, to protect you and your loved ones. Today is a long awaited
day of truth, but it must now lead to a day of justice.”
How do we change and heal these patterns of injustice in our cities?
That is the essence of a restorative city. It’s too much to go into here,
but RESCALED has written a booklet about detention houses within restorative cities,
to be shared with anyone who is interested.
In 2026, RESCALED will organize restorative city walks in different European cities,
walks that show places of injustice and tell stories that could lead to restorative
cities. Because justice is not about walls and distance, but about proximity,
connection, and responsibility. society gets to choose: do we build prisons? Or do
we build futures?
Detention houses are intentionally designed as part of the social and physical fabric
of our communities. They are not isolated structures built to exclude, but
integrated spaces created to support the well-being of the individuals within them
and the society around them. This is not a utopian idea. It is a deliberate and
practical choice that reflects the kind of society we want to be. We already make
bold decisions when it comes to our planet: we set climate goals, we invest in
renewable energy, we demand sustainable solutions. Why, then, should we accept
outdated, harmful prison systems in justice that we would never accept in health
care, education, or climate policy?
Just as we are transitioning to a sustainable future for our environment, we can, and
must, choose a justice system rooted in human dignity, social equity, and individual
autonomy. A system that heals rather than harms, connects rather than isolates, and
prepares rather than punishes.
It has always surprised me that one of the symbols of our justice system is Lady
Justice wearing a blindfold, representing neutrality. But we need to accept that she
is not neutral and never has been neutral. Our laws were written in a time where men
held all power, and when women and people of colour did not have rights in many
countries. Today, we still see the ripples of that legacy in our societies and
justice systems.
I am asking you to not turn a blind eye towards injustice. I am asking you to keep
looking beyond the words that are written in policies and see the people and stories
behind it. And more importantly, recognise the patterns of injustice behind those
stories, patterns of injustice that cause collective traumaThese are not individual
failures, but collective problems that we, as a society, have created together. And
therefore, we must deal with it together and not place that on the individual
shoulders of people in prison and their families.
Too many of the people in prison were raised in poverty. Too many of them lack access
to quality education. Too many come from broken homes. Too many live with the
ongoing effects of colonial histories. Too many deal with mental health issues. So
why do we not feel collective shame when we imprison people? Why do we not feel
collective shame when we talk about improving prisons? And why are we not talking
about removing prisons from our societies instead?
The personal is political, the political is personal.
You are probably reading this because you want a different future, because you
realise we can do better. You are likely trying to shape a better future every
single day. And you probably have your own personal painful history as well, perhaps
also shaped through justice systems.
Nevertheless, you stand up when you are faced with injustice, not only for yourself,
but for your family, friends and strangers. I thank you for that.
For justice is not written in law books, it is not embodied by the state.
Justice lives in us; it lives in communities where we live.
Veronique Aicha
You can sign up at RESCALED to either organize or to take the walk.
Across Europe, justice systems are reevaluating their approach to
addressing young adults who come into conflict with the law. For
those aged eighteen to twenty-five,
The United Nations plays a crucial role in establishing global
standards for all forms of deprivation of liberty. Through
committees, conventions, and monitoring bodies, like
Across Europe, prisons have become ground zero for a growing
mental health crisis. This crisis is not just about the
vulnerabilities of those incarcerated, but
Across Europe, justice systems are reevaluating their approach to
addressing young adults who come into conflict with the law. For
those aged eighteen to twenty-five,
The United Nations plays a crucial role in establishing global
standards for all forms of deprivation of liberty. Through
committees, conventions, and monitoring bodies, like