I think the term "forgiveness" is too tinged with religion for me to use it as such, so I opt for another term, "understanding." This might just be an issue of semantics -- I don't know.
I have forgiven my parents. They did the best they could with what they knew. It was the 70's. I do, however, hold them accountable. I refuse to paint a rosy picture or act like everything was hunky dory. But I am no longer angry with them.
I like Britt's use of the phrase "hold them accountable" in regards to my own parents.
I try to see my parents as the children they were. Unlike me, they didn't have any one (adults) step in as positive, nurturing alternatives from which to pattern their own behaviors. I had so many teachers and other adults in my life that allowed me to see other options. My parents, my father especially, came from such a sad and brutal upbringing. I don't think he authentically knows who he is -- he's kind of "identity-less." (If that makes sense.) My mom, too, but when she taps into something creative, I get a glimpse of a tiny part of her that wasn't damaged. Their own development as children -- especially in the case of my father -- was very impaired. When I consider them as those children, I feel maternal towards them. I start to understand how their origins and lack of resources for repair at an early age weren't there. Yet, they did in some ways improve the way the parented beyond the way their own parents parented them.
I understand their ways and I hold them accountable. It is a very fragile thing.
As for the molesters, I wouldn't know where to begin.
I don't forgive society, though, because it does not seem to realize that an individual's well-being is not the whole issue, but rather that society as a whole is not analyzing itself, processing cultural behaviors, etc. that allows for the generation and regeneration of such unhealthy ways.