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Thich Nhat
Hanh
Zen
Master, poet, peace and human rights activist,
Thich Nhat Hanh was born in central Vietnam
in 1926 and joined the monkhood at the age
of 16. In Saigon in the early 1960's, he founded
the School of Youth for Social Services (SYSS),
a grass roots relief organization that rebuilt
bombed villages, set up schools and medical
centers, resettled homeless families, and organized
agricultural cooperatives. Rallying some 10,000
student volunteers, the SYSS based its work
on the Buddhist principles of non-violence
and compassionate action. Despite government
denunciation of his activity, Nhat Hanh also
founded a Buddhist University, a publishing
house, and an influential peace activist magazine
in Vietnam.
Exiled
from Vietnam, he traveled to the U.S. where
he made the case for peace to federal and Pentagon
officials including Robert McNamara. He may
have changed the course of U.S. history when
he persuaded Martin Luther King, Jr. to oppose
the Vietnam War publicly, and so helped galvanize
the peace movement. The following year, King
nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize. Subsequently
Nhat Hanh led the Buddhist delegation to the
Paris Peace Talks.
Often
referred to as the most beloved Buddhist teacher
in the West, Thich Nhat Hanh's teachings and
practices appeal to people from various religious,
spiritual, and political backgrounds. Nhat
Hanh offers a practice of "mindfulness" that
is beneficial for people of all faiths, by
helping us resist and transform the speed and
violence of our modern society. His life and
teachings have deeply influenced millions of
people, including scores of luminaries in different
fields: politician Jerry Brown, civil rights
champion Martin Luther King, Jr., eco-activist
Joanna Macy, and Catholic mystic Thomas Merton
- to name a few.
He
has published more than 100 titles, including
more than 40 in English: Peace is Every Step,
Being Peace, Touching Peace and many more.
His books are published by Parallax
Press.
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