Showing posts with label Plum Village. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Plum Village. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Enjoy Poetry Written by Thich Nhat Hanh's Students

Kwanzan Cherry Tree, msact at English Wikipedia.

Please enjoy the poem "Whispering" written by David, a member of Thich Nhat Hanh's Plum Village meditation community.

Poetry from the Plum Village Meditation Community

This poem was published in the July 2, 2020 "The Raft" e-newsletter along with the note, "Thank you very much to all of you who shared your beautiful poetry in response to our request to submissions last week."

Whispering

Looking out my bedroom window
I often wonder what the Cherry Tree
and the wind say to one another.

Do they lament the fragility
of the pink springtime flowers,
as they surf on currents
drifting to the ground?

I listen intently to the whispering
but cannot hear.

Do they laugh and joke
like old friends
and wish for old days
when life is remembered better?

I listen intently to the whispering
but cannot feel.

Do they wonder
at the reality of loss
or laugh at our
human lack of vision?

I listen intently to the whispering
but cannot see.

Can I make sense
of the rustling leaves
or am I simply eavesdropping?

- David

Read more poems from the community on www.thichnhathanhfoundation.org.

Enjoy watching the five minute video "Daily Life - Clarity Hamlet at Deer Park Monastery" on the Thich Nhat Hanh Foundation YouTube channel. This video was also shared in the July 2 e-newsletter.




Deer Park Monastery

"Deer Park Monastery is a mindfulness practice center and monastic training center founded by the Vietnamese Buddhist monk, author, and peace activist, Thich Nhat Hanh (Thay).

"Deer Park is a place to quiet the mind, look deeply, and enjoy the wonders of life within and around us through the practices of sitting meditation, walking meditation, mindful eating, deep relaxation meditation, and sharing togetherness. We invite all who wish to cultivate peace and happiness in their lives to plan a visit — for a day or for a retreat.

"This 400-acre sanctuary rests peacefully in the chaparral mountains of southern California, surrounded and protected by oaks and the natural landscape. It was established in July 2000 by the Plum Village four-fold Sangha. Now, it is a safe and serene refuge for many practitioners to come and learn the art of mindful living and to practice with a community, a Sangha. At Deer Park, the residential monastic community and lay community practice together year round under the guidance of our teacher, Thich Nhat Hanh (Thây), in the tradition of engaged Buddhism, practicing mindfulness throughout our everyday life. There are two hamlets: Solidity Hamlet (for monks and laymen) and Clarity Hamlet (for nuns and laywomen). The two hamlets come together several times a week to practice."

Continue reading about Deer Park Monastery on www.deerparkmonastery.org.

Sunday, July 26, 2020

This Is, Actually, Your Moment - a Beautiful Dharma Talk By Sister Boi Nghiem

Sister Boi Nghiem, www.vivrdespiertos2014.blogspot.com.

On May 21, 2020, the Thich Nhat Hanh community shared a a recording of a beautiful heartfelt Dharma talk and commencement speech given by Sister Boi Nghiem.

The talk is addressed to the graduating high school seniors of 2020 - the class "with perfect vision" - but I think it's really for anyone facing challenges in these difficult times.

This Is, Actually, Your Moment

Sister Boi Nghiem says, "We can only have insight and wisdom when our vision is clear. 2020 is the year for that vision. For generations into the future, people will remember you as heroes and sheroes for your sacrifice and your vision."

Watch "Class of 2020, This Is, Actually, Your Moment | Sr. Boi Nghiem, 2020-04-19 Magnolia Grove Monastery" on the Plum Village YouTube channel.



Sister Boi Nghiem

Sister Boi Nghiem lives at Magnolia Grove Monastery one hour from Memphis, Tennessee. Magnolia Grove Monastery is a Buddhist monastery in the Plum Village Tradition in Batesville, Mississippi.

She said in an 2014 interview, "I’m twenty-seven years old. I’ve been ordained for five and a half years. I was born in Vietnam, and when I was eleven, my family moved to the United States. I grew up in Memphis, Tennessee, and then I went to Plum Village when I was twenty-one years old. It was the legal age for people to go clubbing, but I chose to go to Plum Village instead.

"My sister is also a nun. She’s now at Blue Cliff Monastery. She has been a nun for ten years. That was one of the main reasons that I know the practice, because of my sister. When I was a teenager, I was not so interested in the practice. I was just like any typical Vietnamese American teenager. I liked to listen to music and do other things that were quite fast-paced. I listened to ‘Nsync and Backstreet Boys. Whenever my sister sent videos of Plum Village to my house, especially performances of the monastics, I couldn’t sit and watch because everything was so slow. I would fast forward it. It made me so sleepy.

"When I was nineteen, I started to go online and research and read Buddhism. The first book that I read was Thay’s Being Peace. I went to Deer Park for two weeks during a fall break in August 2004. I was able to see the simplicity of the monastics—to see them practice, and how happy they were, and the harmony they had. A beautiful image that I will always remember from Deer Park was that one time, I saw a young sister helping an elder sister to put on her shoes. The younger sister took the pair of shoes and placed it in front of the elder sister’s feet. How often do you see this kind of image in America? It’s very rare. When I saw that image, I was like, 'Wow! It’s so beautiful how we can take care of each other in this simple and gentle way, with so much love.'

"On October 20, I went to Plum Village. I only bought a oneway ticket, because I didn’t have enough money to buy a two-way ticket. Some Vietnamese people believed that one of the main reasons why you became a monastic was because your heart was broken or you had difficulties in your family. I didn’t have either of those, so I thought, 'This is a great time for me to go, because if I wait until I’m older, I might suffer and it would be difficult for me to have a monastic life.'"

Continue reading the interview "Lightness in My Heart - An Interview with Sister Boi Nghiem" by Natascha Bruckner.

The Raft

I learned about this talk through reading "The Raft," a special weekly series during the pandemic, assembled by the Thich Nhat Hanh Foundation, Plum Village Monastery, Parallax Press, and the Plum Village App team to help keep people grounded and connected during these challenging times.

Read old issues of "The Raft" and subscribe on the Thich Nhat Hanh Foundation website.

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Love in Action: Learning from Sister Peace, a Buddhist Nun in the Plum Village Tradition

Sister Peace, @eartholderpv on Twitter.

Sister Peace, a Buddhist nun ordained in the Plum Village tradition and a student of Thich Nhat Hanh, presented during the "Taking Refuge in the Beloved Community – Breathing for Peace, Justice and Freedom" online event I joined organized by Plum Village UK.

Love in Action

I enjoyed learning from Sister Peace through this June 28, 206 interview "Dharma 24/7" by Koun Franz published by Lion's Roar and this interview "Love In Action - Jo Confino & Sr. Peace (interview)" published on the Plum Village YouTube channel.



There are many other opportunities to learn from Sister Peace including this June 14 event "Reclaiming Our Space: Finding Freedom Right Where We Are with Sister Peace and Sister True Vow organized by Earth Holder Community Online Sangha, a mindful earth justice initiative in the Plum Village community of engaged Buddhism.

Reclaiming Our Space, @earthholderpv on Twitter.

This June 14 event was all about self-care.

Watch the video recording of the event, "June 2020 EHC Online Sangha: Reclaiming our Space with Sister Peace and Sister True Vow" on the Earth Holder Community YouTube channel.

Sister Peace

"Sister An Nghiem (Sister Peace) is a Buddhist nun who lives in Plum Village. She has dedicated her life to bringing the practice of mindfulness to people around the world - from educators and teenagers to artists and politicians. She is particularly interested in helping people understand the aspiration of Thich Nhat Hanh and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to build the 'Beloved Community.' Before becoming a nun, she lived in Washington, D.C. and worked for the Executive Office of the Mayor."


Learn about becoming a monastic in the Plum Village tradition.

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

A New Paradigm For Racial Justice and the Global Pandemic - Contemplations on the Five Mindfulness Trainings

Thich Nhat Hanh, www.honestgoodscompany.com.

On June 22, 2020 I joined the Plum Village UK online event "Taking Refuge in the Beloved Community – Breathing for Peace, Justice and Freedom."

The presenters, including Marisela Gomez and Valerie Brown, took turns reading from "A New Paradigm For Racial Justice and the Global Pandemic" and sharing their thoughts.

Afterwards I found "A New Paradigm For Racial Justice and the Global Pandemic", written by Marisela Gomez and Valerie Brown, on the ARISE Sangha website. 

ARISE (Awakening through Race, Intersectionality, and Social Equity) Sangha

I read that "ARISE (Awakening through Race, Intersectionality, and Social Equity) Sangha is a community of mindfulness practitioners and monastics who come together to heal the wounds of racial injustice and social inequity, beginning with looking deeply within ourselves and using the energy of compassion, understanding, and love in action. 

"As practitioners in the Plum Village tradition of Thich Nhat Hanh, we aspire to engage our global community in the work of healing through social action. We seek to nourish and protect Beloved Community in our sangha and beyond."

Marisela Gomez and Valerie Brown are members of the ARISE core group. 

Order of Interbeing, the ordained students of Thich Nhat Hanh, shared on their website, "Centering the lives of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) in our practices meets the suffering where it is and offers a path to freedom. A New Paradigm for Racial Justice and the Global Pandemic” is an offering by Marisela Gomez and Valerie Brown. We encourage all Order members to read and practice these Contemplations on the Five Mindfulness Trainings."

You can make "A New Paradigm For Racial Justice and the Global Pandemic" part of your practice. Download it as a PDF.

Thich Nhat Hanh, www.singingbirdsangha.org.

A New Paradigm For Racial Justice and the Global Pandemic

By Marisela Gomez and Valerie Brown

"Let us open to a new and deeper way of understanding the Five Mindfulness Trainings, guiding principles for mindful and ethical living, which call us toward individual and collective awakening, compassion, and peace. We are aware that we are interconnected. What happens in Wuhan, China affects people in New York City. What happens to the Black body affects all bodies. We are called forward.

"The global pandemic is a gateway to suffering worldwide, disproportionately impacting Black people, indigenous, and people of color, who face poverty, sickness, displacement, and death. They, we are not alone. Our lives and livelihood are interconnected. We are called forward.

"We cannot exist independent of low wage workers, health care workers, un-housed people, single mothers, undocumented people, the unemployed and underemployed. If one such person lives on the knife edge of racial, ethnic, social, structural, and systemic oppression and discrimination we are all affected. We are called forward.

"The practitioner dwells in the now, recognizing equanimity and instability, discrimination and non-discrimination, ill-being and well-being, practicing right view and engaged through compassionate action. Aware of the cycle of racial, ethnic, and social inequities and discrimination, we courageously turn to practice wholeheartedly. We are called forward.

"Lighting a stick of incense, listening to the sutras, sitting upright and solid, palms joined, the practitioner looks within and in concentration the path and fruit of skillful action is revealed. We are called forward.

"Speak aloud these words with the sangha voice, a true river of understanding:

Acknowledging Beauty as Reverence for Life

"Aware of the suffering caused by oppression and generational harm based on racial, cultural, social, and ethnic inferiority and superiority and its resultant structures of injustices and harm, I acknowledge the beauty and violence inherent in life. I vow to resist being complicit in systems and structures that continue to perpetuate violence and hatred instead of reverence of life for marginalized groups. I recognize that each person contributes to my individual and our collective awakening, and the co-creation of a world that celebrates and affirms differences and similarities. All living beings can teach me something, when I remember to pause, breathe, listen deeply with a calm and open mind and heart, and ask myself: ‘is there more’ or ‘ what else is here with me’’?’ I honor and respect all life guided by Right View and Right Energy.

Belonging and Connecting as True Happiness

"Aware of the suffering caused by ignorance and aversion of my own and other’s racial, ethnic, cultural, and social history, its legacy and how this affects me whether I am aware of it or not, I am committed to connecting to these histories. I know that turning toward these histories with an open heart is my journey of awakening to true belonging. I will take the time to learn the history of the racial and ethnic group with which I identify as well as for other socially constructed racial and ethnic groups. Aware that there is no genetic or biological difference between different racial and ethnic groups, and that these identities were constructed by one group to establish dominance over others, I will turn toward racial and other forms of othering with an open heart and compassionate action. I know that this history has led to fragmentation inside and outside body and mind and brought much suffering to all beings. I vow to transform this suffering through the practice of connecting with an open heart. I will notice when emotions of belonging and othering arise and I will ask myself ‘why’? Whatever feelings, perceptions, or mental formations arise, I will embrace and when needed engage with love in action. I am committed to practicing Right Resolve, Right Speech, Right Action, and Right Livelihood so I can help relieve this legacy of racial and social suffering. I will practice looking deeply to see that true happiness is not possible without true connecting leading to belonging and understanding. 

Cherishment as True Love

"Aware of the suffering caused by discrimination and oppression, I vow to understand its roots within my consciousness and my body and the collective body of the sangha and larger society. I vow to recognize the ways in which I have benefitted or not-benefitted explicitly or implicitly from systems and structures that foster discrimination and injustice. I am aware of the legacy of violence, especially unlawful police violence, perpetrated against Black people, indigenous people, people of color, differently abled people, people of various gender identities and expressions and sexual orientation, and others who are marginalized. I acknowledge the lived experience of all people to deepen my capacity for understanding and for greater compassionate action. I am aware that narrowly constructed, prevalent interpretations of intimate relationships constrain how we cherish each other in our expression of love, leaving many further isolated and alienated. I am committed to looking tenderly at my suffering, knowing that I am not separate from others and that the seeds of suffering contain the seeds of joy. I am not afraid of bold love that fosters justice and belonging and tender love that seeks peace and connection. I cherish myself and my suffering without discrimination. I cherish this body and mind as an act of healing for myself and for others. I cherish this breath. I cherish this moment. I cherish the liberation of all beings guided by the wisdom and solidity of the sangha. This is my path of true love. 
 
Vulnerability as Loving Speech and Deep Listening

"Aware that vulnerability is the essence of our true nature, our humanness, I vow to risk listening and speaking non-judgmentally with understanding and compassion to alleviate suffering and support peace in myself and others. I vow to live with empathy, compassion, and awareness and to listen for understanding rather than disagreement. When I’ve hurt others through my unskillful action or speech, I vow to practice making a good apology that acknowledges what I have done and offers sincere regret, knowing that this supports the other person and me. I am committed to speaking that aligns with my highest aspiration and encourages honesty and truthfulness. I am committed to generous and courageous listening that bridges differences and supports understanding of others who may be different from me. I am committed to taking meaningful steps to become a true instrument of peace and to help others to be the same. When I am not able to understand the experiences of others, I vow to come back to my breath and my body, and to offer myself gentle patience while learning to support myself in developing greater awareness and skill. I vow to practice awareness of my beliefs, perceptions, and feelings, aversions, and desires and to take refuge in mindful breathing and in the sangha to support greater stability, peace, and understanding. Through my practices of vulnerability, patience, forgiveness, and deeply listening, I know that my speech will be guided by love and understanding. Practicing in this way supports Right Speech and Right Action and guides me to Right Insight. 

Welcoming as True Nourishing and Healing

"Aware of the suffering caused by the consumption of an inadequate history of racial and ethnic forms of social segregation, I am committed to healing myself and the world by welcoming, and practicing with this awareness. I will notice how my thoughts, perceptions, feelings, words, and actions may have been influenced by this inaccurate history. I will look deeply to understand how both physical and mental health, for myself, my family, and my society have been influenced by embracing and denying this racial, social, and ethnic history of inferiority and superiority and its legacy of inequities and injustices. I will cultivate joy to support me toward individual and collective wholeness. I will practice mindfulness of the Four Kinds of Nutriments to become aware of how edible foods, sense impressions, volition, and consciousness are all influenced by this history. Practicing with Right Energy and Right Resolve, my Right Action of consumption will include awareness of certain websites, electronic games, TV programs, films, magazines, books, and conversations and how they continue to foster wrong perceptions of racial, ethnic, and social injustices. My understanding of interbeing supports my conscious consumption that sustains a healthy understanding of differences, one that does not oppress or discriminate. This Right Insight will preserve peace, joy, and bring healing in my body and consciousness, and in the collective body and consciousness of my family, my society and the Earth. To assure that my descendants do not live in a racially, ethnically, and socially unjust world, I commit to diligently practicing with true welcoming on this path to nourish and heal myself, the sangha, and society.

"The Five Mindfulness Trainings keeps us centered in life’s storms and joys and reminds us that life is a precious gift. The Trainings are a path to liberation and transformation. Practicing these Trainings supports us toward racial and ethnic reconciliation and social change and heals deep suffering. The Five Mindfulness Trainings helps us cross this shore of suffering and brings us to the side of true awakening and love.

We are called forward."

Marisela Gomez, www.brilliantbaltimore.com.

Marisela Gomez

"Marisela B. Gomez is a community activist, author, public health professional, and physician scientist. She received a BS and MS from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, a PHD, MD, and MPH from the Johns Hopkins University. Of Afro-Latina ancestry, she has spent more than 20 years in Baltimore involved in social justice activism and community building/health research and practice.

"Some of her most notable work includes working on and leading the Save Middle East Action Committee which was created by residents living north of the Johns Hopkins Medical Center in an area called Middle East in response to learning the area would become the future site of a $1.8 billion redevelopment project known as the John Hopkins Biotech Park. Marisela was interestingly positioned in this battle as she was a resident of the area and a community member of the Johns Hopkins Medical Center. She would later go on to write a book about the organizing experience, the historical disinvestment of Middle East, and the ongoing consequences of race, economic, and institutional power inequities faced by marginalized communities."

Continue reading Marisela's biography on www.critsocjustice.wordpress.com.

Valerie Brown, www.aspiresangha.org. 

Valerie Brown

"Valerie transformed her high-pressure, high-stakes twenty-year career as a lawyer-lobbyist, representing educational institutions and nonprofits, to human-scale work with diverse leaders and teams to foster trustworthy, compassionate, and authentic connections.

"She is an accredited leadership coach at the Professional Certified Coach level (PCC), international retreat leader, writer, and Chief Mindfulness Officer and Professional Pilgrim of Lead Smart Coaching, LLC, specializing in the application and integration of mindfulness and leadership, and she is a Co-Director of Georgetown’s Institute for Transformational Leadership in Washington, D.C."

Continue reading Valerie's biography on www.leadsmartcoaching.com, a company she founded.

Read Valerie's interview "Skillful Action for a Path Forward" published by Plum Village on June 8, 2020.

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Recommendation, a Poem by Thich Nhat Hanh Written During the Vietnam War

Thich Nhat Hanh, www.happinessagoda.world.

On June 18, Thich Nhat Hanh's meditation community, Plum Village, circulated "Recommendation," a poem he wrote during the Vietnam War.

They wrote, "His life and the lives of his students were at risk on a daily basis. Yet this poem encourages insight, compassion, and forgiveness."

A poem written in 1965

Thich Nhat Hanh shared, "I wrote this poem in 1965 especially for the young people in the School of Youth for Social Service who risked their lives every day during the war, recommending them to die without hatred. Some had already been killed violently, and I cautioned the others against hating. Our enemy is our anger, hatred, greed, fanaticism, and discrimination against men. If you die because of violence, you must meditate on compassion in order to forgive those who kill you. When you die realizing this state of compassion, you are truly a child of the Awakened One. Even if you are dying in oppression, shame, and violence, if you can smile with forgiveness, you have great power.

"Rereading this lines of this poem, I suddenly understood the passage in the Diamond Sutra that speaks about kshanti, endurance or tolerance: 'Your courage intact, your eyes kind, untroubled (even as no one sees them), out of your smile will bloom a flower. And those who love you will behold you across ten thousand worlds of birth and dying.'

"If you die with compassion in mind, you are a torch lighting our path. Before burning herself, Nhat Chi Mai one of the earliest Tiep Hien members, read this poem into a tape and left it for her parents.

"Alone again I will go on with bent head in order to see you, know you, remember you. Your love has become eternal. 'On the long rough road, the sun and the moon will continue to shine.' When there is a mature relationship between people, there is always compassion and forgiveness. In our life we need others to see and recognize us so that we feel supported. How much more do we need the Buddha to see us! On our path of service, there are moments of pain and loneliness, but when we know that the Buddha sees and knows us, we feel a great surge of energy and a firm determination to carry on."

Recommendation

Promise me,
promise me this day,
promise me now,
while the sun is overhead
exactly at the zenith,

promise me:
Even as they
strike you down
with a mountain of hatred and violence;
even as they step on you and crush you
like a worm,
even as they dismember and disembowel you,
remember brother, remember:
man is not our enemy.

The only thing worthy of you is compassion –
invincible, limitless, unconditional.
Hatred will never let you face
the beast in man.

One day, when you face this beast alone with your courage intact, your eyes kind,
untroubled
(even as no one sees them),
out of your smile
will bloom a flower.

And those who love you
will behold you
across ten thousand worlds of birth and dying.

Alone again,
I will go on with bent head,
knowing that love has become eternal.
On the long, rough road
the sun and moon will continue to shine.

- Thich Nhat Hanh

Alone Again - Plum Village song

Listen to a song inspired by the poem "Alone Again - Plum Village song" by the brothers of Weston Priory on the Wake Up Songs YouTube channel.

Weston Priory is a community of Benedictine monks who reside in Weston, Vermont, founded in 1952.


Taking Refuge in the Beloved Community - Breathing for Peace, Justice and Freedom

Plum Village UK invites everyone to participate in the online event, "Taking Refuge in the Beloved Community – Breathing for Peace, Justice and Freedom."

The Event

Plum Village UK shared, "Sangha members have been deeply touched by the many circumstances unfolding around us, resulting from racial injustice and oppression. Breathing is the foundation of our practice. Our breath not only connects us to life but supports us to transform our suffering — turning it into soil where the flowers of understanding, compassion and peace can grow.

"Plum Village UK is hosting a short event to offer the Beloved Community a space to breathe together, to show our solidarity to life around us, to breathe cultivating the energy of love and compassion, and to remind ourselves of our commitments to our Five and Fourteen Mindfulness Trainings.

"We will enjoy the power of our collective breathing and recite the Contemplations on the Five Mindfulness Trainings: A New Paradigm for Racial Justice & the Global Pandemic, by Marisela Gomez and Valerie Brown for this specific time."

Schedule

June 22, 2020

11:00 AM - 11:45 AM PT

How to Join

The event will be held on Zoom.

The "Taking Refuge in the Beloved Community" event will also stream live to the Plum Village UK YouTube channel once attendee capacity is reached. Please follow the link that Zoom will share with you at the time.

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Watch Dr. Larry Ward Speak On "The Fires of Grief Are Burning"

Peggy Rowe, Thich Nhat Hanh, Dr. Larry Ward, www.whatsuploveland.com.

I receive regular email updates from Plum Village, Thich Nhat Hạnh's global meditation community.

The June 4, 2020, Plum Village e-newsletter read, "How do we practice in these challenging times? Senior Dharma teacher Dr. Larry Ward offers concrete practices to absorb and respond to racial inequity in America in this 13-minute Dharma talk.

"Dr. Larry Ward is the director of the Lotus Institute, co-author of Love's Garden: A Guide to Mindful Relationships, and author of the forthcoming book America's Racial Karma."

Dr. Larry Ward

Watch "The Fires of Grief Are Burning: A message from Dr. Larry Ward" on the Lotus Institute YouTube channel.



The Heart of London Sangha

The same Plum Village newsletter listed upcoming events offered by the Heart of London Sangha "Specially for People of Colour / BAME / Mixed Racial Heritages / Global Majority."

The Heart of London Sangha is part of a UK network of practitioners, Plum Village UK.


Lotus Institute

The Lotus Institute, the organization directed by Dr. Larry Ward, is also offering online events.

Dr. Larry Ward

Larry’s introduction to Buddhist practice began in Calcutta, India in 1977 but it was not until 1991 when Larry met Thich That Hanh that this practice became the center of his life and service. He was ordained as a lay minister in Thay’s Plum Village Tradition in 1994 and a Dharma teacher in 2000. He has lived in spiritual community and has assisted Thich Nhat Hanh throughout the world. He has accompanied Thich Nhat Hanh on peace-making missions in China, France, Korea and Vietnam, as well as throughout the USA.

Continue reading Dr. Larry Ward's biography on www.thelotusinstitute.org.

Pre-order America's Racial Karma: An Invitation to Heal by Dr. Larry Ward, coming in fall 2020.



America's Racial Karma, www.penguinrandomhouse.com.

Sunday, April 12, 2020

Join Thich Nhat Hanh's Plum Village Community Online During Covid-19

Thich Nhat Hanh, mindfulnessbell.org.

Happy Easter, friends. Today seems like the right day to share about Thich Nhat Hanh's community.

Thich Nhat Hanh


In May 2014 a child asked Thich Nhat Hanh, "What is God?"

Thich Nhat Hanh replied, "Certainly God is not an idea or a notion. God is very real, and you can get in touch with God if you are mindful, concentrated and insightful." 

It is a beautiful teaching. Watch it on the Plum Village YouTube channel.



Live Meditations and Dharma Talks


Plum Village, near Bordeaux in southwest France, is Europe's largest Buddhist monastery and a retreat center in Thich Nhat Hanh's tradition. Plum Village France is a continuation of the "Sweet Potato Community" Thich Nhat Hanh founded outside of Paris in the 1970's after he was exiled from Vietnam.

Thich Nhat Hanh is at Tu Hieu Temple in Hue, Vietnam, where he became a monk at age sixteen. His community is offering a regular livestreaming program using the Plum Village YouTube channel.

The livestream program calendar is on the Plum Village website. You can plan ahead by looking at the calendar or you can subscribe to the Plum Village YouTube channel, request notifications, and participate when you can. There are programs offered almost daily.

Recorded Short Teachings


In addition to the livestreams you can watch short video teachings on the Plum Village App YouTube channel. I found this powerful teaching on how to help overwhelmed doctors, filmed at Stanford University in 2013.



There is also a free Plum Village Mobile App.

Books


There are more than one hundred Thich Nhat Hanh books to read, perhaps available to borrow in e-book form from your public library. I like The Art of Living, published in 2017.

Thich Nhat Hanh


Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh is a global spiritual leader, poet, and peace activist, renowned for his powerful teachings and bestselling writings on mindfulness and peace. A gentle, humble monk, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. called him “an Apostle of peace and nonviolence” when nominating him for the Nobel Peace Prize. Exiled from his native Vietnam for almost four decades, Thich Nhat Hanh has been a pioneer bringing Buddhism and mindfulness to the West, and establishing an engaged Buddhist community for the 21st Century.

Read the rest of his biography on the Plum Village website.