Thich Nhat Hanh Seeks to Heal Wounds of War
By Matt Steinglass, VOA, March 23, 2007

Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam -- Eighty-year-old monk
Thich Nhat Hanh has been back in his native Vietnam
for a month, holding a series of ceremonies aimed at
healing the wounds of the Vietnam War. In the 1960's,
Hanh was one of the leaders of South Vietnam's
Buddhist "struggle movement," which opposed the war
and the South Vietnamese government.

<< Zen Buddhist leader Thich Nhat Hanh sits at the
opening of a three-day requiem for those killed on
both sides of the Vietnam War, 16 Mar 2007

He was later exiled, and few of today's Vietnamese
remember him from that era, but many are attracted by
the modernized form of Zen Buddhism he has brought
from the West. Matt Steinglass reports from Ho Chi
Minh City.

Thich Nhat Hanh leads thousands of Vietnamese in
prayer rituals at Vinh Nghiem Pagoda in Ho Chi Minh
City. The prayers are dedicated to the dead of both
sides in the Vietnam War.

Hanh was an important figure during the war, one of
the leaders of a Buddhist movement that staged huge
anti-war protests in the city then called Saigon.

But almost no one in the crowd on Saturday knew of
Hanh's actions in the 1960's.

Many, like Trang Tri Son, were born after the war
ended in 1975, and were drawn not by Hanh's history in
Vietnam, but by his fame in Europe and America.

Son says he has read that Hanh is among the 60 most
important spiritual leaders in the world.

Hanh has lived mainly in France since he was exiled by
the South Vietnamese government in 1966 for his
anti-war activities. His Order of Interbeing has
thousands of followers in monastic communities there,
and in the American states of Vermont and California.
His philosophy centers on what he calls "mindfulness:"
focusing on what one is doing, not being so distracted
by material things that one allows life to pass by.

Brother Phap Lo, a Swede who is one of dozens of
Western followers who accompanied Hahn to Vietnam,
explains.

"We're trying to find ways of using the teachings of
the Buddha and our teacher so that we can live more
happily and peacefully, whether it's as a therapist or
at an office," he said. "We want to live more simply,
taking better care of the earth and each other."

It is a philosophy well suited to the spiritual needs
of harried Westerners. As Vietnam turns to capitalism
and the pace of life increases, it is a philosophy
that also appeals to today's ambitious Vietnamese
professionals.

Hanh drew a crowd of several hundred to a lecture for
businessmen, held at a country club near Ho Chi Minh
City. Chau Zesiger, a Vietnamese fashion entrepreneur
married to an American, says she finds Hanh's Zen
philosophy more attractive than traditional Vietnamese
Buddhism.

"Buddhist philosophy is usually negative, because life
is sorrow," said Chau. "But for Thich Nhat Hanh, life
is positive. We breathe, and we smile - this is the
name of the program. And it's quite interesting to
combine into our business life."

This is Hahn's second return visit to Vietnam. The
first came in 2005, 39 years after he was exiled for
his actions against the war.

In 1965, he founded the Youth School for Social
Services in Saigon. At the time, South Vietnam was not
only fighting a war against the communists, it was
also torn by conflict between the mainly Catholic
government and the Buddhist movement to which Hanh
belonged.

The movement opposed the war, and some of its monks
burned themselves alive in protest. Hanh wanted to
form a peaceful "third force," training Buddhists in
agriculture and medicine, and sending them out to poor
villages to start development projects.

That ultimately proved dangerous. Former monk Tran
Dinh Nguyen, now 68, was a student at Hanh's school.

Nguyen says in May of 1967, someone threw a grenade
into one of the classrooms, killing two female
students. Two weeks later, eight students disappeared
from a village and were never seen again. In July,
five students were kidnapped and shot.

Nguyen says the students might have been killed by
either side. The government thought Thich Nhat Hanh
was a communist. The communists thought he was a CIA
agent.

By the time of the attacks, Hanh was already in exile.
He traveled to the U.S. in 1966 to build links with
the American anti-war movement, and convinced Martin
Luther King, the American civil rights leader, to
speak out publicly against the war.

For his efforts, the Saigon government barred him from
returning home, and after North Vietnam defeated the
South in 1975, the communist government continued the
ban.

Hanh stayed in the West, building up an entourage of
Zen monks and devoted lay followers.

Older Vietnamese have been drawn on this visit by
Hanh's attempt to heal the lingering trauma of the
war. At Vinh Nghiem Pagoda on Saturday, 75-year-old Vu
Thi Quy said the bitterness remains.

Quy says she gave eight thousand dollars last year to
monks at another pagoda to pray for the family she
lost in the war. Her father-in-law died in a communist
prison, and one of her daughters perished while trying
to flee Vietnam by boat in 1978.

Quy says she, like many Vietnamese, remembers nothing
of the Buddhist movement of the 1960's. But other
shared memories have not disappeared. When Hanh and
his followers began chanting last weekend, thousands
of Buddhists showed they still know the tunes.

source:
http://www.buddhistchannel.tv/index.php?id=55,3876,0,0,1,0


 
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