By: Jeremy David Engels, The Conversation
Published in: *Scroll*
Date: January 26, 2026
Source:
https://scroll.in/article/1090118/beloved-community-thich-nhat-hanh-devoted-his-life-towards-martin-luther-king-jrs-dream
True democracy and people showing up for each other is at the heart of this
idea which emerged from King’s activism and Hanh’s engaged Buddhism.

Before Martin Luther King Jr was killed, he asked several of his friends
<https://www.parallax.org/product/brothers-in-the-beloved-community/> to
continue his life’s work building what he called “beloved community”. One
of the people he invited was the Vietnamese Zen Buddhist monk, poet and
mindfulness teacher Thich Nhat Hanh
<https://theconversation.com/thich-nhat-hanh-who-worked-for-decades-to-teach-mindfulness-approached-death-in-that-same-spirit-175495>
.

My new book, *On Mindful Democracy: A Declaration of Interdependence to
Mend a Fractured World*
<https://www.parallax.org/product/on-mindful-democracy/> is inspired by
King and Hanh’s friendship. These two men bonded over the shared insight
that how we show up for each other matters, as does how we advocate for
social change. In his sermon “Loving Your Enemies
<https://kinginstitute.stanford.edu/king-papers/documents/loving-your-enemies-sermon-delivered-dexter-avenue-baptist-church>”
King announced, “Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.” Hanh
taught: <https://tnhtalks.org/2023/12/09/peace-is-the-way/> There is no way
to peace, peace is the way.“

At the heart of beloved community is true democracy. To be agents of change
who do not add to the suffering of the world, people must learn to become
more loving and peaceful people
<https://www.parallax.org/product/good-citizens/>.
‘The real enemies of man’

Hanh was born in 1926 in central Vietnam
<https://plumvillage.org/about/thich-nhat-hanh/biography>. As a young
Buddhist monk living in a nation confronted by colonialism, conflict and
war, he developed the doctrine of “engaged Buddhism
<https://www.parallax.org/product/good-citizens/>”, premised on the belief
that working to relieve suffering in the world is enlightenment.

During the mid-1960s, amid the Vietnam War – Vietnamese call it the
“American War” – Hanh founded the School of Youth for Social Services
<https://www.parallax.org/product/learning-true-love/> to practice engaged
Buddhism and help those affected by the bombs raining down on their homes.

On June 1, 1965, Hanh wrote a letter to King
<https://plumvillage.org/about/thich-nhat-hanh/letters/in-search-of-the-enemy-of-man>
 to raise awareness of the suffering of the Vietnamese people. He also
hoped to correct some common misconceptions about Buddhism.

His overarching point was that Buddhists in Vietnam did not hate Americans.
In fact, they did not hate anyone. Their goal was simply to bring an end to
war – and an end to the delusions that led to war. “Their enemies are not
man. They are intolerance, fanaticism, dictatorship, cupidity, hatred and
discrimination which lie within the heart of man,” he wrote. “These are the
real enemies of man – not man himself.”

Hanh refused to take a side during the war. He stood for peace. His peace
activism earned him a 39-year banishment from his homeland
<https://plumvillage.org/about/thich-nhat-hanh/biography>.
King’s dream

Marc Andrus, author of the 2021 book *Brothers in the Beloved Community*
<https://www.parallax.org/product/brothers-in-the-beloved-community/>,
notes that King and Hanh met in person twice: once in Chicago, on May 31,
1966, and a second time in May 1967, at the World Council of Churches Peace
on Earth Conference in Geneva, Switzerland. In Geneva, King shared his
understanding of the beloved community with Hanh, inviting him to
participate in its construction.

In between these two meetings, King nominated Hanh for the 1967 Nobel Peace
Prize
<https://plumvillage.org/letter-from-dr-martin-luther-king-jr-nominating-thich-nhat-hanh-for-the-nobel-peace-prize-in-1967>,
writing in his nomination letter, “I know Thich Nhat Hanh, and am
privileged to call him my friend.” No award was given that year, however,
perhaps to protest King’s choice to make his nomination letter public.
Nominations were typically private, but King used his to call out the
injustice of the Vietnam War.

Hanh was crushed when he learned of King’s death in 1968. “I was in New
York when I heard the news of his assassination; I was devastated. I could
not eat; I could not sleep,” he later recalled
<https://www.parallax.org/product/at-home-in-the-world/>. “I made a deep
vow to continue building what he called ‘the beloved community’ not only
for myself but for him also. I have done what I promised Martin Luther King
Jr. And I think that I have always felt his support.”
‘Beloved community’

In the years after King’s murder, part of Hanh’s life work was devoted to
fulfilling King’s dream and building the “beloved community.”

Beloved community is not an abstraction. It is a loose-knit global
community composed of a multitude of smaller, local communities committed
to practicing peace, nonviolence, freedom, love and justice. Emerging from
King’s activism and Hanh’s engaged Buddhism, these communities are also
committed to social change.

In 1982, Hanh and his student Sister Chan Khong established the Plum
Village monastery in southern France
<https://plumvillage.org/about/thich-nhat-hanh/biography>. In the years
since, the Plum Village community has founded dozens of monasteries around
the world, including three in the United States: Blue Cliff in upstate New
York, Deer Park outside San Diego, and Magnolia Grove in Mississippi.

Hanh’s lay students have established thousands of smaller Plum Village
sanghas <https://www.parallax.org/mindfulnessbell/sangha-directory/> –
communities – in North America and Europe. These monasteries and sanghas
serve as practice centers where people learn to embody the ideals of
beloved community in their mindfulness practice and daily lives.

Since the time of the Buddha, people committed to the path of mindfulness
have agreed to live by a number of “precepts.” These precepts, typically
numbering five, provide a moral foundation for action. Hundreds of
thousands of people attending Plum Village retreats have agreed to live by
the updated, secular version of the precepts that Hanh and his community
wrote called the Five Mindfulness Trainings
<https://plumvillage.org/mindfulness/the-5-mindfulness-trainings>. These
include: reverence for life, true happiness, true love, loving speech and
deep listening, and nourishment and healing.

The Five Mindfulness Trainings are written to provide people with a
practical path to building a shared life based in love, compassion, joy and
peace: the type of life that both King and Hanh envisioned for all.

As Hanh told the global Plum Village community in a 2020 letter titled Climbing
Together the Hill of the Century
<https://plumvillage.org/articles/climbing-together-the-hill-of-the-century>:
“We have continued that aspiration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and every
day, our practice is to generate brotherhood and sisterhood, to cultivate
joy and the capacity to help people. This is a concrete way to realise and
continue that dream.”

On MLK Day, their friendship and writings are a reminder that democracy
rests on the ability of citizens to be present for each other
<https://theconversation.com/mindfulness-is-about-remembering-a-practice-of-coming-back-to-the-now-242181>
, to recognise their interconnectedness
<https://theconversation.com/meditating-on-the-connectedness-of-life-could-help-reunite-a-divided-country-heres-how-interbeing-works-269919>
, to embody loving kindness
<https://theconversation.com/what-loving-kindness-meditation-is-and-how-to-practice-it-in-the-new-year-270984>
 and to disagree without resorting to violence
<https://theconversation.com/what-buddhism-can-teach-in-this-moment-of-deep-divisions-no-person-is-evil-only-mistaken-242575>
.

*Jeremy David Engels** is Liberal Arts Endowed Professor of Communication,
Penn State.*

*This article was first published on **The Conversation*
<https://theconversation.com/building-beloved-community-remembering-the-friendship-between-martin-luther-king-jr-and-buddhist-monk-thich-nhat-hanh-272062>
*.*

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