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A teaching about a practice of compassionate concern that could be our new national m.o. "If we know how to water the seed of wisdom and compassion in us...it will be able to bring relief right away to our nation, to our world. That is my conviction...if we know how to listen as a nation to their suffering, we can already bring a lot of relief. They will feel that they are being understood. That can diffuse the bomb already."
-Suzanne-
September 25, 2001
A Public Talk by Thich Nhat Hanh at the Riverside Church, New York
My Dear friends, I would like to tell you how I
practice when I get angry. During the war in Vietnam,
there was a lot of injustice, and many thousands,
including friends of mine, many disciples of mine, were
killed. I got very angry. One time I learned that the
city of Ben Tre, a city of three hundred thousand
people, was bombarded by American aviation just because
some guerillas came to the city and tried to shoot down
American aircrafts. The guerillas did not succeed, and
after that they went away. And the city was destroyed.
And the military man who was responsible for that
declared later that he had to destroy the city of Ben
Tre to save it. I was very angry.
But at that time, I was already a practitioner, a solid
practitioner. I did not say anything, I did not act,
because I knew that acting or saying things while you
are angry is not wise. It may create a lot of
destruction. I went back to myself, recognizing my
anger, embracing it, and looked deeply into the nature
of my suffering.
In the Buddhist tradition, we have the practice of
mindful breathing, of mindful walking, to generate the
energy of mindfulness. It is exactly with that energy
of mindfulness that we can recognize, embrace, and
transform our anger. Mindfulness is the kind of energy
that helps us to be aware of what is going on inside of
us and around us, and anybody can be mindful. If you
drink a cup of tea and you know that you are drinking a
cup of tea, that is mindful drinking. When you breathe
in and you know that you are breathing in, and you
focus your attention on your in-breath, that is
mindfulness of breathing. When you make a step and you
are aware you are making a step, that is called
mindfulness of walking. The basic practice in Zen
centers, meditation centers, is the practice of
generating mindfulness every moment of your daily life.
When you are angry, you are aware that you are angry.
Because you already have the energy of mindfulness in
you created by the practice, that is why you have
enough of it in order to recognize, embrace, look
deeply, and understand the nature of your suffering.
I was able to understand the nature of the suffering in
Vietnam. I saw that not only Vietnamese suffered, but
Americans suffered as well during the war in Vietnam.
The young American man who was sent to Vietnam in order
to kill and be killed underwent a lot of suffering, and
the suffering continues today. The family, the nation
also suffers. I could see that the cause of our
suffering in Vietnam is not American soldiers. It is a
kind of policy that is not wise. It is a
misunderstanding. It is fear that lies at the
foundation of the policy.
Many in Vietnam had burned themselves in order to call
for a cessation of the destruction. They did not want
to inflict pain on other people, they wanted to take
the pain on themselves in order to get the message
across. But the sounds of planes and bombs was too
loud. The people in the world, not many of them were
capable of hearing us. So I decided to go to America
and call for a cessation of the violence. That was in
1966, and because of that I was prevented from going
home. And I have lived in exile since that time, 1966.
I was able to see that the real enemy of man is not
man. The real enemy is our ignorance, discrimination,
fear, craving, and violence. I did not have hate the
American people, the American nation. I came to America
in order to plead for a kind of looking deeply so that
your government could revise that kind of policy. I
remember I met with Secretary of Defense Robert
MacNamara. I told him the truth about the suffering. He
kept me with him for a long time and he listened deeply
to me, and I was very grateful for his quality of
listening. Three months later, when the war
intensified, I heard that he resigned from his post.
Hatred and anger was not in my heart. That is why I was
listened to by many young people in my country,
advocating them to follow the path of reconciliation,
and together we helped to bring about the new
organizations for peace in Paris. I hope my friends
here in New York are able to practice the same. I
understood, I understand suffering and injustice, and I
feel that I understand deeply the suffering of New
York, of America. I feel I am a New Yorker. I feel I am
an American.
You want to be there for you, to be with you, not to
act, not to say things when you are not calm. There are
ways that we can go back to ourselves and practice so
that we rediscover our calmness, our tranquility, our
lucidity. There are ways that we can practice so that
we understand the real causes of the suffering. And
that understanding will help us to do what needs to be
done, and not do what could be harmful to us and to
other people. Let us practice mindful breathing for
half a minute before we continue.
In Buddhist psychology, we speak of consciousness in
terms of seeds. We have the seed of anger in our
consciousness. We have the seed of despair, of fear.
But we also have the seed of understanding, wisdom,
compassion, and forgiveness. If we know how to water
the seed of wisdom and compassion in us, that seed,
these seeds will manifest themselves as powerful sorts
of energy helping us to perform an act of forgiveness
and compassion. It will be able to bring relief right
away to our nation, to our world. That is my
conviction.
I believe very strongly that the American people have a
lot of wisdom and compassion within themselves. I want
you to be your best when you begin to act, for the sake
of America and for the sake of the world. With
lucidity, with understanding and compassion, you will
turn to the people who have caused a lot of damage and
suffering to you and ask them a lot of questions.
"We do not understand enough of your suffering, could
you tell us? We have not done anything to you, we have
not tried to destroy you, to discriminate against you,
and we do not understand why you have done this to us.
There must be a lot of suffering within you. We want to
listen to you. We may be able to help you. And together
we can help build peace in the world." And if you are
solid, if you are compassionate when you make this
statement, they will tell you about their suffering.
In Buddhism we speak of the practice of deep listening,
compassionate listening, a wonderful method by which we
can restore communication communication between
partners, communication between father and son,
communication between mother and daughter,
communication between nations. The practice of deep
listening should be taken up by parents, by partners,
so that they can understand the suffering of the other
person. That person might beour wife, our husband, our
son, or our daughter. We may have enough good will to
listen, but many of us have lost our capacity to listen
because we have a lot of anger and violence in us. The
other people do not know how to use kind speech; they
always blame and judge. And language is very often
sour, bitter. That kind of speech will always touch off
the irritation and the anger in us and prevent us from
listening deeply and with compassion. That is why good
will to listen is not enough. We need some training in
order to listen deeply with compassion. I think, I
believe, I have the conviction, that a father, if he
knows how to listen to his son deeply and with
compassion, he will be able to open the door of his
sons heart and restore communication.
People in our Congress and our Senate should also train
themselves in the art of deep listening, of
compassionate listening. There is a lot of suffering
within the country, and many people feel their
suffering is not understood. That is why politicians,
members of the Parliament, members of the Congress have
to train themselves in the art of deep listening
listening to their own people, listening to the
suffering in the country, because there is injustice in
the country, there is discrimination in the country.
There is a lot of anger in the country. If we can
listen to each other, we can also listen to the people
outside of the country. Many of them are in a situation
of despair, many suffer because of injustice and
discrimination. The amount of violence and despair in
them is very huge. And if we know how to listen as a
nation to their suffering, we can already bring a lot
of relief. They will feel that they are being
understood. That can diffuse the bomb already.
I always advise a couple that when they are angry with
each other, they should go back to their breathing,
their mindful walking, embrace their anger, and look
deeply into the nature of their anger. And they may be
able to transform that anger in just fifteen minutes or
a few hours. If they cannot do that, then they will
have to tell the other person that they suffer, that
they are angry, and that they want the other person to
know it. They will try to say it in a calm way.
"Darling, I suffer, and I want you to know it." And in
Plum Village, where I live and practice, we advise our
friends not to keep their anger for more than
twenty-four hours without telling the other person.
"Darling, I suffer, and I want you to know it. I do not
know why you have done such a thing to me. I do not
know why you have said such a thing to me." That is the
first thing they should tell the other person. And if
they are not calm enough to say it, they can write it
down on a piece of paper.
The second thing they can say or write down is, "I am
doing my best." It means "I am practicing not to say
anything, not to do anything with anger, because I know
that in doing so I will create more suffering. So I am
embracing my anger, I am looking deeply into the nature
of my anger." You tell the other person that you are
practicing holding your anger, understanding your
anger, in order to find out whether that anger has come
from your own misunderstanding, wrong perception, your
lack of mindfulness and your lack of skillfulness.
And the third thing you might like to say to him or her
is, "I need your help." Usually when we get angry with
someone, we want to do the opposite. We want to say, "I
don't need you. I can survive by myself alone." "I need
your help" means "I need your practice, I need your
deep looking, I need you to help me to overcome this
anger because I suffer." And if I suffer, there is no
way that you can be happy, because happiness is not an
individual matter. If the other person suffers, there
is no way that you can be truly happy alone. So helping
the other person to suffer less, to smile, will make
you happy also.
The Buddha said, "This is like this, because that is
like that. This is because that is." The three
sentences I propose are the language of true love. It
will inspire the other person to practice, to look
deeply, and together you will bring about understanding
and reconciliation. I propose to my friends to write
down these sentences on a piece of paper and slip it
into their wallet. Every time they get angry at their
partner or their son or daughter, they can practice
mindful breathing, take it out, and read. It will be a
bell of mindfulness telling them what to do and what
not to do. These are the three sentences: "I suffer and
I want you to know it." "I am doing my best." "Please
help."
I believe that in an international conflict, the same
kind of practice is possible also. That is why I
propose to America as a nation to do the same. You tell
the people you believe to be the cause of your
suffering that you suffer, that you want them to know
it, that you want to know why they have done such a
thing to you, and you practice listening deeply and
with compassion.
The quality of our being is very important, because
that question, that statement is not a condemnation,
but a willingness to create true communication. "We are
ready to listen to you. We know that you must have
suffered a lot in order to have done such a thing to
us. You may have thought that we are the cause of your
suffering. So please tell us whether we have tried to
destroy you, whether we have tried to discriminate
against you, so that we can understand. And we know
that when we understand your suffering, we may be able
to help you." That is what we call in Buddhism "loving
speech" or "kind language," and it has the purpose of
creating communication, restoring communication. And
with communication restored, peace will be possible.
This summer, a group of Palestinians came to Plum
Village and practiced together with a group of
Israelis, a few dozen of them. We sponsored their
coming and practicing together. In two weeks, they
learned to sit together, walk mindfully together, enjoy
silent meals together, and sit quietly in order to
listen to each other. The practice taken up was very
successful. At the end of the two weeks practice, they
gave us a wonderful, wonderful report. One lady said,
"Thay, this is the first time in my life that I see
that peace in the Middle East is possible." Another
young person said, "Thay, when I first arrived in Plum
Village, I did not believe that Plum Village was
something real because in the situation of my country,
you live in constant fear and anger. When your children
get onto the bus, you are not sure that they will be
coming home. When you go to the market, you are not
sure that you will survive to go home to your family.
When you come to Plum Village, you see people looking
at each other with loving kindness, talking with other
kindly, walking peacefully, and doing everything
mindfully. We did not believe that it was possible. It
did not look real to me."
But in the peaceful setting of Plum Village, they were
able to be together, to live together, and to listen to
each other, and finally understanding came. They
promised that when they returned to the Middle East,
they would continue the practice. They will organize a
day of practice every week at the local level and a day
of mindfulness at the national level. And they plan to
come to Plum Village as a bigger group to continue the
practice.
I think that if nations like America can organize that
kind of setting where people can come together and
spend their time practicing peace, then they will be
able to calm down their feelings, their fears, and
peaceful negotiation will be much easier.
[Also read an interview with Thich Nhat Hanh.]
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