by Galena May » Mon Jul 29, 2024 5:51 am
I do not think Draco Malfoy should go to Azkaban because although he was a bully and a Muggle-born hater, he probably wasn't inherently bad. He was just looking for ways to feel accepted and respected in however negative a way, because he felt a lack of acceptance somewhere in his life, perhaps at home because his family was busy trying to please Voldemort and therefore had high expectations of him from a very young age, which he was probably not sure he was up to. He had always been raised by his parents to hate Muggle-borns, boast about his wealth and status, and pretend that it is not okay to be anything but number one even unseeing and denying his flaws and shortcomings and manipulating others to achieve the effect. Bullying others was simply a side-effect of the same because he was always taught that no one could be better than him. He simply could not accept that Hermione, a Muggle-born, was better than him because he was raised to feel bad about himself if he agreed to that being a possibility, so he felt the need to bully her to protect his ego and feelings. A lot of what he did was simply projection, projection of the treatment that he got at his own home. As he grew up and reached the age of reasonably being able to have his opinions, an age of seventeen years old to be more precise, he did stand up against his family and his father even in the presence of Voldemort to protect Harry, here I am talking about the Malfoy Manor incident where Harry was caught by Snatchers and Draco refused to identify him despite the possible peril for his family as a result of that. The rest of what he did on the wrong side even after that was a result of him feeling forced and too deep in the negative rut to get out. After the war ended, Draco redeemed himself as said by the original poster, and the person that he became was not one to be sent to Azkaban. Sending a person to Azkaban and punishing them on the basis of what they did when they were below seventeen is not really commendable, because he didn't really have a personality back then. I believe that his adult personality was shaped positively by the events that transpired during the war, which is a bonus. Even in the Muggle realm, in most countries, juvenile crimes and influenced crimes are treated more leniently, and if the person is somewhere between being a child and an adult, their emotional maturity and various other factors are taken into consideration. Therefore, a lesser punishment like a fine or house arrest for some time would be reasonable, or maybe a few compulsory years in a rehabilitation home with a trained therapist, but sending him to Azkaban which is the second highest punishment in the wizarding world after the Dementor's kiss, like other more malevolent Death Eaters, was not what he should be put through, especially since he already provided proof that he was capable of rehabilitating.
Beauty is everywhere, if only you will choose to see it!
Galena May for you, a first year witch student at Hogwarts. Say hi if you see me.