The
Crestone Eagle, July 2008:
Thich Nhat Hanh returns to Vietnam
article & photos
by Larry Calloway
Thich
Nhat Hanh’s return to Vietnam in May for a retreat followed
by a United Nations conference was a triumph for his “engaged
Buddhism.” Not only was his global influence evident
at the conference, but he and 400 retreatant-delegates (most
of us Westerners) were warmly received on a dramatic slow
walk in the center of Hanoi.
Triumph perhaps is too military a term for the vindication
of an 81-year-old monk who teaches, “Peace is every
step,” but his young life was defined by war, as was
his ancient nation. Not until 1985 was he free to return after
39 years of exile, first by the anti-communists, then by the
communists.
Sponsoring this year’s UN “Vesak Conference,”
as it is called, was a significant move for the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam, which has been criticized for religious
repression but is encouraging tourism and the recovery of
ancient cultural traditions. Vesak is an important Buddhist
holiday that the UN in 1999 resolved to recognize yearly.
The first four conferences were held in Bangkok, a center
for the Theravada Buddhism of Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Burma
and Sri Lanka but not Vietnam, whose Mahayana tradition can
be traced to Chinese Chan (Zen).
The conference at Hanoi’s proud new National Convention
Center included formal workshops on a variety of issues addressed
by Nhat Hanh and his monastic representatives. But because
the world continues to suffer from “the scourge of war,”
and perhaps because the conference was for the first time
in Vietnam, the issues of war, conflict and healing were foremost.
In his opening address, Bikkhu Bohdi, a Pali sutras authority
from Chulalongkorn University in Thailand, made the connection
between world peace and Buddhism, saying, “No doubt
meditation and moral principles contribute to peace, since
war begins in the minds of men.” Or, as Nhat Hanh put
it in his keynote address, “The roots of war and conflict
are in us!”
He proposed “the idea of engagement,” he told
us, in his first published article in 1954. (Engaged Buddhism,
with its mindfulness training and emphasis on precepts, is
a worldly practice, not a philosophy.) It was, as he put it,
“a time of great confusion” in Vietnam. (The French
colonialists, defeated at Dien Bien Phu, were exiting and
the Americans, covert sponsors of the Ngo Dinh Diem regime,
were entering.) As war formed in the minds of McNamara, Rusk,
Bundy, the joint chiefs, the Kremlin, Mao, and others, the
Vietnam Buddhists countered, in so many words: Leave Vietnam
alone!
Perhaps because this was Vietnam, Nhat Hanh’s dharma
talks in the eight-day retreat dwelled on the American war,
as it is known there. The people of the small nation were
caught between foreign ideologies. “Everyone was willing
to die for ideologies,” he said, but Buddhism teaches
freedom from ideology. The fighting was with ideas and weapons
from the outside. “How can you fight such a war? Brother
against brother?”
On June 11, 1963, some monks boarded a Peugeot sedan at a
monastery in Hue and drove to a busy intersection in Saigon,
where they stopped and got out with a five-gallon container.
One of them, Quang Duc, sat cross-legged, was doused with
gasoline and burned to death without moving. The news photos
of the self immolation were a global sensation, contributing
to the unintended chain of events that led to the assassination
of Diem and his brother in early November (three weeks before
the assassination of President Kennedy.) The historic Peugeot
is now on display in a pavilion at the Hue monastery.
“Some had to burn themselves alive to tell people we
don’t want this war,” Nhat Hanh remembered. In
the early sixties he went often to the United States, where
he would eventually study at Princeton, lecture at Cornell
and teach at Columbia. He was a powerful multilingual anti-war
speaker. But sometimes there was a problem. At a huge anti-war
rally in 1966 a young man suddenly yelled, “Why are
you here? You should be in Vietnam fighting the American imperialists!”
In other words, Nhat Hanh said, the man wanted him to fight,
to kill Americans. He answered, “Well, I thought the
root of the war was here—in Washington—and that’s
why I have come.”
In Hanoi, I met Paul Davis, who had a similar thought at
an anti-war march in New York in the sixties. People started
yelling, “Ho Chi Minh, Ho Chi Minh, you’re the
one who’s gonna win.” That was never the point.
Paul was no ordinary protestor. He had joined the United
States Marines two weeks after his high school graduation
in rural Ohio and landed at Da Nang in 1965, when the U.S.
under President Johnson began direct combat operations. Davis
was wounded in 1966, and while recovering in the U.S. appeared
as a Marine on a panel at a college. Someone asked him if
the Vietnamese wanted us there. He spun out a long response,
and his interlocutor said, “You have not answered the
question.” In a Zenlike, koanlike, moment, Paul’s
whole mental being suddenly dissolved. He held back tears.
Somehow his life had changed forever.
He began attending Thich Nhat Hanh retreats more than 10
years ago after his son died in a car crash. He now counsels
Iraqi veterans and their families. In 2003, Paul obtained
his Marine casualty report and followed the coordinates to
the point where he was wounded. He recognized the distant
horizon that he saw as he waited for evacuation. He would
write a poem in the words of the buried mine that got him.
This was on Marble Mountain, near Da Nang, named for a pure
white quarry. In the village below, dozens of shops now sell
artful sculptures to tourists.
Early one morning during the retreat, we boarded buses and
took a walk along the shore of the central lake, Hoan Kiem,
in down town Hanoi. People were already out doing their morning
jogging and aerobics. We left the buses and gathered at the
tall statue of Ly Thaito, founder of Hanoi. There were the
400 of us in gray robes, plus 30 or so local Vietnamese nuns
in brown robes with conical reed hats. We walked along the
old section of Hanoi and past the historic water puppet theatre
and turned around near the rock pile monument with the Chinese
character for heaven and passed the red bow bridge that goes
to an island shrine.
Funny thing, I thought. No police. No wise guys making nervous
comments. No angry motorcycle drivers urging our slow-walking
meditative line to clear an intersection. Just people watching,
curious. Then, about half way through the demonstration, I
noticed some of them were lining up along our way. And they
were standing respectfully with their palms together at their
hearts.
Back at the foot of Ly Thaito sat Thich Nhat Hanh, diminutive
and smiling. Many of us sat around him, as if waiting for
a lesson. Without comment, he took in the air and the morning
sun and the trees and the birds and the lake, which was at
our backs. He suggested that we all turn around, that the
view was much better that way. He smiled. He was home.
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