Nhat Hanh
Nhất Hạnh or Thích Nhất Hạnh (1926), Dharma title of Nguyễn Xuân Bảo, is a writer on Buddhism, peace activist, scholar, poet and fiction writer. One of the best known Buddhist teachers in the West, Nhất Hạnh's teachings and practices appeal to people from various religious, spiritual, and political backgrounds. A prolific writer, he has authored more than one hundred books.
He was born in Thanh Hoá, northern Vietnam, and is living in France. He joined a Zen monastery at the age of 16, and was fully ordained as a monk in 1949. He coined the term Engaged Buddhism in his book Vietnam: Lotus in a Sea of Fire. In the early 1960s, he founded the School of Youth for Social Services (SYSS) in Saigon, a grassroots relief organization that rebuilt bombed villages, set up schools and medical centers, and resettled families left homeless during the Vietnam War. He traveled to the U.S. a number of times, starting in 1960, to study at Princeton, where he would later teach, as well as at Colombia University and the Sorbonne in Paris. Tireless promoting peace, he met Martin Luther King, Jr. and urged him to oppose the Vietnam War publicly. In a January 25, 1967 letter to the Nobel Institute in Norway, King nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize. Nhất Hạnh also met Thomas Merton, the well-known Catholic monk and mystic, who told his students, "Just the way he opens the door and enters a room demonstrates his understanding. He is a true monk."
In 1969, at the request of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, Nhất Hạnh set up the Buddhist Peace Delegation to the Paris Peace Talks. After the Peace Accords were signed in 1973, he was refused permission to return to Vietnam, and he established a small community a hundred miles southwest of Paris, called "Sweet Potato." In 1976-77, Nhất Hạnh conducted an operation to rescue boat people in the Gulf of Siam, but hostility from the governments of Thailand and Singapore made it impossible to continue. So for the following five years, he stayed at Sweet Potato in retreat - meditating, reading, writing, binding books, gardening, and occasionally receiving visitors. In 1982, Nhất Hạnh established Plum Village, a larger, thriving retreat center near Bordeaux, France, where he has been living in exile from his native Vietnam. He has made two highly-publicized returns to Vietnam, in 2005 and 2007.
Nhất Hạnh's Old Path White Clouds, based on the life of the Buddha, has sold over a million copies in North America, been translated into 20 languages, and will be made into a film financed by Bhupendra Kumar Modi, an Indian billionaire. It is budgeted at 120 million dollars, highest ever for an Indian film, although Nhất Hạnh has declined all royalties.
Linh Dinh started this entry.
Works in Vietnamese
- Ánh xuân vàng
- Bông Hồng Cài Áo
- Bưởi, short stories
- Chắp tay nguyện cầu cho bồ câu trắng hiện
- Dấu chân trên cát
- Đạo Phật Đi vào Cuộc Đời và Các Tiểu Luận Khác
- Đạo Phật Ngày Nay
- Đạo Phật hiện đại hoá
- Để hiểu đạo Phật
- Đạo Phật ngày mai
- Đường xưa mây trắng
- Hoa sen trong biển lửa
- Mai
- Neo Giếng Nước Thơm Trong
- Nẻo về của ý
- Nói với tuổi hai mươi
- Thơ học trò
- Tho tung om va mat troi tung hat
- Thả Một Bè Lau, a zen perspective on Nguyễn Du's Truyện Kiều
- Thử tìm dấu chân trên cát, poetry
- Tieng dich chieu thu
- Tình người
- Tiếng đập cánh loài chim lớn
- Tố
- Tương lai thiền học Việt Nam
- Tương lai văn hóa Việt Nam
- Vào thiền học
- Văn Lang dị sử- truyện cổ tích nước Văn Lang
- Về Việt Nam
- Việt Nam Phật Giáo Sử Luận
Works in English
- A guide to Walking Meditation
- Being Peace
- Breath! You are Alive
- The Heart of Understanding
- The Miracle of Mindfulness
- Interbeing
- Moon Bamboo
- Old Path White Clouds
- Our Appointment with Life
- Peace is Every Step
- The Pine Gate
- Present Moment, Wonderful Moment
- Rose for your Pocket
- The Sun my Heart
- Sutra on Eight Realizations of Great Being
- Touching Peace
- Transformation and healing
- Vietnam: Lotus in a Sea of Fire
- Zen poems
Nhất Hạnh online
- His extensive Wikipedia entry in English and Vietnamese
- "What I Would Say to Osama bin Laden," Nhất Hạnh interviewed by Anne A. Simpkinson, also translated into Vietnamese
- Nhất Hạnh on Abu Ghraib
- "Long Live Impermanence," on Belief Net
- "Do You Have Time to Love?" on Belief Net
- "Jesus and Buddha as Brothers," on Belief Net
- Two audio meditations
- Nhất Hạnh page on Buddhism Today, with many of his texts
- Nhất Hạnh page on Quảng Đức, with many texts
- Nhất Hạnh page on Thư Viện Hoa Sen, with many texts
- Vietnamese translation of Melvin McLeod interviewing Nhất Hạnh, from Shambala Sun
- "Ông thầy tu của mọi thời," Vietnamese translation of an article by Andrea McQuillin, from Shambala Sun
- "Thiền sư Thích Nhất Hạnh nói chuyện về đạo làm người," on Vietnam Express
- "Thiền sư Thích Nhất Hạnh thăm Đại tướng Võ Nguyên Giáp", on Vietnam Express
- "Hoà Thượng Viện trưởng Viện Hoá Đạo rất có lý khi từ chối gặp phái đoàn của Thiền sư Nhất Hạnh," on Saigon USA
- Giao Điểm interviews Thích Nhật Từ about Nhất Hạnh's return trip to Vietnam in 2005
- Authors
- Essayists
- Fiction writers
- Philosophers
- Poets
- Working in Vietnamese
- Essayists composing in Vietnamese
- Fiction writers composing in Vietnamese
- Philosophers composing in Vietnamese
- Poets composing in Vietnamese
- Translated into English
- Translated from Vietnamese into English
- Translated into French
- Translated from Vietnamese into French
- Translated into German
- Translated from Vietnamese into German
- Born 1920-1929
- Man
- Man born 1920-1929
- Entries started by Linh Dinh