ghet anh thich anh
Vậy mà nói anh thương em biết bao Hở lúc nào cũng nhớ em nhiều lắm Hình bóng em khắc vào tim sâu đậm Không lúc nào không nguôi nhớ về em. Ghét anh rồi mặc kệ anh cho xem Em không thèm chờ mong dòng tin nhắn Cũng không cần nghe những lời căn dặn Vì anh làm em lo lắng biết bao
18 Khi ấy, Đức Giê-su nói với các môn đệ rằng : "Nếu thế gian ghét anh em, anh em hãy biết rằng nó đã ghét Thầy trước. 19 Giả như anh em thuộc về thế gian, thì thế gian đã yêu thích cái gì là của nó. Nhưng vì anh em không thuộc về thế gian và Thầy đã chọn, đã tách anh
Cách dùng Động từ chỉ ý thích. Động từ chỉ ý thích cũng tương tự như những động từ thường khác ở nằm trong câu. Chỉ duy nhất điều làm nên đặc biệt cho những động từ này là những động từ theo sau nó sẽ là V-ing thay vì là To V như những động từ khác. Cùng xem
Hãy Khiến Tôi Ghét Cậu là bộ truyện đam mỹ, manga kể về chàng trai Koga Naoto 21 tuổi hiện đang sống với một cô bé Koga Shizuko 5 tuổi và cả hai xưng hô với nhau là mẹ con. Cuộc sống của cả hai không được tốt lắm nhưng bù lại rất hạnh phúc, nhưng vì lo cho Shizuko mà anh buộc phải tìm một công việc ổn định hơn.
Những sở ghét, sở thích khi bạn sống ở du mục bằng tiếng anh, hộ mình vs in progress 0 Tiếng Anh Iris 2 tuần 2021-11-22T09:43:16+00:00 2021-11-22T09:43:16+00:00 2 Answers 7 views 0
mimpi melihat orang yang sudah meninggal hidup lagi. Thich Nhat Hanh aged 16 in Huế, VietnamPhoto taken around 1942, soon after he received novice ordination to enter the monkhood. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Aged 25, shortly after receiving the Bhikshu precepts in 1951. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh as a young Dharma Teacher back row, right with his students, taught at the new Ấn Quang Buddhist Institute in Saigon. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 100KBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Teaching children to read and write using a song about the Bodhisattva of Great Compassion, early with his friends and colleagues, Thich Nhat Hanh developed a social work program for rural development and founded the School of Youth for Social Service. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions In 1966, as a young leader in the growing Buddhist peace had recently founded Van Hanh University, La Boi Press, the School of Youth for Social Service, and the new Order of Interbeing based on the traditional bodhisattva precepts. At this time, he was Editor-in-Chief of the leading Buddhist magazine, publishing over 50,000 copies every week. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 3MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh travelled to the US to call for peace in ID TimeLife_image_116934239 With Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., at a joint press conference about the war in Vietnam in Chicago, 31 May 1966. Unknown. Speaking out for peace © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 4MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Vietnamese refugees aboard the Roland, a ship chartered by Thich Nhat Hanh and his colleagues to rescue people from the seas off Singapore in 1976. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 300KBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh in Paris in the for daring to go abroad to call for peace in 1966, he led the Buddhist Peace Delegation at the Paris Peace Talks. © Jim Forest .For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email jhforest Gardening at Les Patates Douces “Sweet Potatoes” near Paris in the Nhat Hanh and his colleagues and students retreated to the small farmstead in 1975. After the Paris Peace Talks ended with the Paris Peace Accords, Thich Nhat Hanh was denied the chance to return to Vietnam. Thich Nhat Hanh right at a Peace March in New York City, 17 June 1982. Unknown. In south-west France, early Nhat Hanh and his students found land in south-west France, where they established Plum Village mindfulness practice center in 1982. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 500KBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Relaxing with his community in Plum Village, south-west France late 1980s or early 1990s. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 2MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Meditation Hall in Plum Village, France, Nhat Hanh created meditation halls in the old farm buildings, and began to teach the first generation of meditation practitioners in the West. © Simon Chaput. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please contact Presiding over a “lamp transmission” ceremony to ordain Dharma Teachers, in Plum Village, Nhat Hanh began to ordain his first monastic disciples only in 1988, after 35 years of teaching. © Simon Chaput. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please contact In Plum Village, © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 600KBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions At Từ Hiếu Temple in Huế, Vietnam, 2005 Thich Nhat Hanh was finally allowed to return to Vietnam after 39 years of exile. Here he is entering the gate at his “root temple” for the first time since he left in May 1966. © Paul Davis / Touching Peace Photography. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please contact Leading a traditional almsround procession in Huế, Vietnam in 2005. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Planting a bodhi tree in India, 2008. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 9MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Vulture Peak, India, the precepts in the open air on Vulture Peak, one of the Buddha’s sacred sites. © Börje Tobiasson. Available in 6MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Leading a walking meditation, © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 800KBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh inviting the bell to sound, Plum Village, 2009. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 600KBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh arriving in Indonesia, 2010. © Ekayana / Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 20MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Malaysia, September 2010. ©️ Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 10MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh’s European Institute for Applied Buddhism in Waldbröl, Germany, opened in 2008. ©️ Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 600KBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh reviewing one of his newly-published books in has written over 100 books of poetry, fiction, sutra translations, Engaged Buddhism practices and meditation handbooks. ©️ Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 2MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Formal lunch with his growing community of monks, 2011 © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 5MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Trafalgar Square, London. March 31, Nhat Hanh led sitting meditation for over 3,000 people in the heart of the British capital. Nathanaël Corre. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email ncorre Hong Kong Coliseum, 2013Thich Nhat Hanh addressed an audience of over 10,000. © Kelvin Cheuk for PVCEB Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhists. Available in 12MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Chant of compassion, Hong Kong Nhat Hanh’s community invoke the name of the Avalokiteshvara, the Bodhisattva of Great Compassion. © Martin Lam for Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 2MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh listening to his students in Hong Kong, 2013. Broadway, New York City, an exhibition of his calligraphies at ABC Home. ABC Home / Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 730KB With Jim Kim, President of the World Bank, Washington September 2013. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 10MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Thich Nhat Hanh teaching children in Plum Village, Summer 2014. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Receiving an honorary doctorate from Hong Kong University, May 2012 Thich Nhat Hanh created a training program for teachers, to bring secular “applied ethics” into the classroom. ©️ Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 400MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Teaching during a mindfulness retreat for several hundred people in Nhat Hanh’s message focusses on how to nourish joy and happiness, and how to handle pain and sorrow. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 200KBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Leading walking meditation with his community in Plum Village, June 2014. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 3MBFor a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Celebrating his 92nd birthday in Thailand, October a major stroke in November 2014, Thich Nhat Hanh moved to Thailand to join his young disciples from Vietnam at his new Thai Plum Village meditation center. © Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism PVCEB. Available in 1MB+For a high-res version, and to request permission to use this photo for commercial or non-commercial use, please email permissions Returning to Từ Hiếu Temple in Huế, Vietnam, 28 October decided to return to his root temple to spend his remaining Master Thich Nhat Hanh is a global spiritual leader, poet, and peace activist, renowned for his powerful teachings and bestselling writings on mindfulness and peace. A gentle, humble monk, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. called him “an Apostle of peace and nonviolence” when nominating him for the Nobel Peace Prize. Exiled from his native Vietnam for almost four decades, Thich Nhat Hanh has been a pioneer bringing Buddhism and mindfulness to the West, and establishing an engaged Buddhist community for the 21st to pronounce Thich Nhat HanhThe English pronunciation is Tik N’yat Hawn. However, since Vietnamese is a tonal language, this is only a close approximation of how one would pronounce it in Vietnamese. By his students he is affectionately known as Thay pronounced “Tay” or “Tie”, which is Vietnamese for “teacher.”Early YearsBorn in central Vietnam in 1926, Thich Nhat Hanh entered Tu Hieu Temple, in Hue city, as a novice monk at the age of sixteen. As a young bhikshu monk in the early 1950s he was actively engaged in the movement to renew Vietnamese Buddhism. He was one of the first bhikshus to study a secular subject at university in Saigon, and one of the first six monks to ride a activism during war in VietnamWhen war came to Vietnam, monks and nuns were confronted with the question of whether to adhere to the contemplative life and stay meditating in the monasteries, or to help those around them suffering under the bombings and turmoil of war. Thich Nhat Hanh was one of those who chose to do both, and in doing so founded the Engaged Buddhism movement, coining the term in his book Vietnam Lotus in a Sea of Fire. His life has since been dedicated to the work of inner transformation for the benefit of individuals and gunfire, while on a mission to take food to hungry families after historic floodingIn 1961, Thich Nhat Hanh travelled to the United States on a scholarship to study Comparative Religion at Princeton Theological Seminary and the following year went on to teach and research Buddhism at Columbia University. In Vietnam in the early 1960s, Thich Nhat Hanh founded the School of Youth and Social Service, a grassroots relief organization of 10,000 volunteers based on the Buddhist principles of non-violence and compassionate is not to escape from society, but to come back to ourselves and see what is going on. Once there is seeing, there must be acting. With mindfulness we know what to do and what not to do to Nhat HanhAs a scholar, teacher, and engaged activist in the 1960s, Thich Nhat Hanh also founded the Van Hanh Buddhist University in Saigon, La Boi publishing House, and an influential peace activist magazine. In 1966 he established the Order of Interbeing, a new order based on the traditional Buddhist Bodhisattva May 1st, 1966 at Tu Hieu Temple, Thich Nhat Hanh received the lamp transmission’ from Master Chan from VietnamA few months later he traveled once more to the and Europe to make the case for peace and to call for an end to hostilities in Vietnam. It was during this 1966 trip that he first met Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1967. As a result of this mission both North and South Vietnam denied him the right to return to Vietnam, and he began a long exile of 39 years.“He is an Apostle of Peace and Nonviolence.” Martin Luther King Nhat Hanh continued to travel widely, spreading the message of peace and brotherhood, lobbying Western leaders to end the Vietnam War, and leading the Buddhist delegation to the Paris Peace Talks in Plum Village in FranceHe also continued to teach, lecture and write on the art of mindfulness and living peace,’ and in the early 1970s was a lecturer and researcher in Buddhism at the University of Sorbonne, Paris. In 1975 he established the Sweet Potato community near Paris, and in 1982, moved to a much larger site in the south west of France, soon to be known as “Plum Village.”The early days of Plum Village PHOTO Jim ForestUnder Thich Nhat Hanh’s spiritual leadership Plum Village has grown from a small rural farmstead to what is now the West’s largest and most active Buddhist monastery, with over 200 resident monastics and over 10,000 visitors every year, who come from around the world to learn “the art of mindful living.”Plum Village welcomes people of all ages, backgrounds and faiths at retreats where they can learn practices such as walking meditation, sitting meditation, eating meditation, total relaxation, working meditation and stopping, smiling, and breathing mindfully. These are all ancient Buddhist practices, the essence of which Thich Nhat Hanh has distilled and developed to be easily and powerfully applied to the challenges and difficulties of our the last twenty years over 100,000 people have made a commitment to follow Thich Nhat Hanh’s modernized code of universal global ethics in their daily life, known as “The Five Mindfulness Trainings.”A talk for children in the Still Water Meditation Hall in Upper Hamlet, Plum VillageMore recently, Thich Nhat Hanh has founded Wake Up, a worldwide movement of thousands of young people training in these practices of mindful living, and he has launched an international Wake Up Schools program training teachers to teach mindfulness in schools in Europe, America and calligraphies, 2013Thich Nhat Hanh is also an artist, and his unique and popular works of calligraphy – short phrases and words capturing the essence of his mindfulness teachings – have since 2010 been exhibited in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Canada, Germany, France, and New the last decade Thich Nhat Hanh has opened monasteries in California, New York, Vietnam, Paris, Hong Kong, Thailand, Mississippi and Australia, and Europe’s first “Institute of Applied Buddhism” in Practice Centers in the Plum Village tradition offer special retreats for businesspeople, teachers, families, healthcare professionals, psychotherapists, politicians, and young people as well as war veterans and Israelis and Palestinians. It is estimated that over 75,000 people participate in activities led by Plum Village monks and nuns worldwide every the World Bank, September 2013In recent years Thich Nhat Hanh led events for members of US Congress and for parliamentarians in the UK, Ireland, India, and Thailand. He has addressed the World Parliament of Religions in Melbourne and UNESCO in Paris, calling for specific steps to reverse the cycle of violence, war and global warming. On his visit to the US in 2013 he led high-profile mindfulness events at Google, The World Bank, and the Harvard School of 11 November 2014, a month after his 88th birthday and following several months of rapidly declining health, Thich Nhat Hanh suffered a severe stroke. Although he was unable to speak, and was mostly paralyzed on the right side, he continued to offer the Dharma and inspiration through his peaceful, serene and valiant November 2018, Thich Nhat Hanh moved to Từ Hiếu Temple in Vietnam where he ordained with his teacher when he was sixteen years old. He expressed a wish to stay there for his remaining days. He came out regularly in his wheelchair to visit the temple altars and to lead the sangha on walking meditation around the ponds and ancestral stupas. Thay’s return to Từ Hiếu was a bell of mindfulness reminding us all of how precious it is to belong to a spiritual lineage with deep roots. Whether we have attended a retreat, or simply read one of Thay’s books or watched a talk, and have been touched by his teachings—we are all connected to this ancestral stream of wisdom and passed away peacefully in the early moments of 22 January 2022, in the Deep Listening Hut at Từ Hiếu Temple in Huế, surrounded by loving disciples. Around the world, online and in-person, hundreds of thousands of people in the Plum Village International community collectively observed a week of mindfulness practice and ceremonies, generating a powerful energy of compassion, peace, and brotherhood and sisterhood. Thich Nhat Hanh’s Funeral and Cremation took place on Saturday 29th January in Huế, his ashes distributed among his practice centers in Europe, the US and Nhat Hanh’s living legacy of engaged Buddhism is continued by his community of over 700 monastic disciples at 11 monasteries, as well as by hundreds of lay Dharma Teachers, thousands of members of his Order of Interbeing, and hundreds of thousands of followers worldwide. Through online teachings, retreats, teaching tours and engaged actions, the International Plum Village Community of Engaged Buddhism is carrying his extraordinary contribution stay in touch with activities of Thay’s community, bringing his teachings and practices into the world, please sign up to The Raft a twice-monthly newsletter. To lend your energy to help Thay’s legacy continue far into the future, please consider supporting the Thich Nhat Hanh a more detailed account of Thich Nhat Hanh’s life, you may like to read his extended about Thich Nhat Hanh’s life
Thich Nhat Hanh é um dos mestres do zen-budismo mais conhecidos e respeitados no mundo de hoje. Vale muito a pena ter contato com suas ideias, pensamentos e mensagens. Eles trazem paz à alma e alimentam o espírito. Por isso, abaixo, acompanhe uma seleção com alguns pensamentos célebres deste famoso monge. 1 “Quando outra pessoa te faz sofrer, é porque ela possui um sofrimento profundo dentro de si mesma, e seu sofrimento está transbordando. Ele não precisa de punição; ele precisa de ajuda.” – Thich Nhat HanhThich Nhat Hanh 2 “Ser bonito significa ser você mesmo. Você não precisa ser aceito pelos outros. Você precisa se aceitar. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 3 “A esperança é importante porque pode tornar o momento presente menos difícil de suportar. Se acreditarmos que amanhã será melhor, podemos suportar as dificuldades hoje. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 4 “Se não estivermos felizes, se não tivermos paz, não podemos compartilhar a paz e a felicidade com os outros, mesmo aqueles que amamos, aqueles que vivem sob o mesmo teto. Se estivermos em paz, se estivermos felizes, podemos sorrir e florescer como uma flor, e todos em nossa família, toda a nossa sociedade, se beneficiarão de nossa paz. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 5 “A melhor maneira de cuidar do futuro é cuidar do momento presente.” Thich Nhat Hanh 6 “A vida está disponível apenas no momento presente.”Thich Nhat Hanh 7 “Ontem já se foi. Amanhã ainda não chegou. Hoje é o único dia disponível para nós; é o dia mais importante de nossas vidas. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 8 “Você deve amar de tal forma que a pessoa que você ama se sinta livre.”Thich Nhat Hanh 9 “O verdadeiro amor sempre traz alegria para nós mesmos e para quem amamos. Se nosso amor não traz alegria para nós dois, não é amor verdadeiro. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 10 “A liberdade não nos é dada por ninguém; temos que cultivá-lo nós mesmos. É uma prática diária … Ninguém pode impedi-lo de estar ciente de cada passo que você dá ou de cada inspiração e expiração. ” Thich Nhat HanhThich Nhat Hanh 11 “O desapego nos dá liberdade, e a liberdade é a única condição para a felicidade. Se, em nosso coração, ainda nos apegamos a qualquer coisa – raiva, ansiedade ou posses – não podemos ser livres. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 12 “Para que as coisas se revelem a nós, precisamos estar prontos para abandonar nossos pontos de vista sobre elas.”Thich Nhat Hanh 13 “O segredo para criar paz é o seguinte quando você escuta outra pessoa, você tem apenas um propósito oferecer a ela uma oportunidade de esvaziar seu você for capaz de manter essa consciência e compaixão vivas em você, então você pode sentar-se por uma hora e ouvir, mesmo que a fala da outra pessoa contenha muitas percepções erradas, condenações e amarguras. Você pode continuar a ouvir porque já está protegido pelo néctar da compaixão em seu próprio você não praticar a respiração consciente para manter viva essa compaixão, pode perder sua própria paz. Irão surgir irritação e raiva, e a outra pessoa perceberá e não será capaz de continuar. Manter a consciência o mantém seguro. “Thich Nhat Hanh 14 “A raiva é como uma tempestade subindo do fundo de sua consciência. Quando sentir que está chegando, concentre-se na respiração. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 15 “Inspirando, eu acalmo o corpo e a mente. Expirando, eu sorrio. Morando no momento presente, eu sei que este é o único momento. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 16 “Precisamos estar cientes do sofrimento, mas manter nossa clareza, tranquilidade e força para ajudar a transformar a situação.”Thich Nhat Hanh 17 “Temos que continuar aprendendo. Temos que estar abertos. E temos que estar prontos para liberar nosso conhecimento a fim de chegar a uma compreensão mais elevada da realidade. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 18 “As pessoas têm dificuldade em abandonar o sofrimento. Por medo do desconhecido, eles preferem o sofrimento familiar. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 19 “As pessoas matam e são mortas porque se agarram com muita força às suas próprias crenças e ideologias. Quando acreditamos que nossa fé é a única que contém a verdade, a violência e o sofrimento certamente serão o resultado ”.Thich Nhat Hanh 20 “Prevenir a guerra é muito melhor do que protestar contra a guerra. Protestar contra a guerra é tarde demais. ”Thich Nhat Hanh 21 “Porque você está vivo, tudo é possível.”Thich Nhat Hanh
Thich Nhat Hanh, o monge zen-budista, poeta e ativista da paz que na década de 1960 ganhou destaque como opositor da Guerra do Vietnã, morreu neste sábado 22, aos 95 anos, cercado por seus seguidores no templo onde sua jornada espiritual começou.“A Comunidade Internacional Plum Village do Budismo Engajado anuncia que nosso amado professor Thich Nhat Hanh faleceu pacificamente no Templo Tu Hieu em Hue, Vietnã, às 00h do dia 22 de janeiro de 2022, aos 95 anos”, diz um comunicado em seu Twitter funeral de uma semana será realizado no templo de maneira tranquila e pacífica, de acordo com seus seguidores. “Thich Nhat Hanh será lembrado como um dos líderes religiosos mais influentes e proeminentes do mundo”, disse a Encarregada de Negócios Marie C. Damour, dos EUA. Missão ao Vietnã disse em um comunicado.“Através de seus ensinamentos e trabalho literário, seu legado permanecerá para as próximas gerações”, disse ela, acrescentando que seus ensinamentos, em particular sobre trazer a atenção plena para a vida cotidiana, enriqueceram a vida de inúmeros um majestoso conjunto de obras e aparições públicas ao longo de décadas, Thich Nhat Hanh falou em tons suaves, mas poderosos, da necessidade de “andar como se estivesse beijando a terra com os pés”.Ele sofreu um derrame em 2014 que o deixou incapaz de falar e voltou ao Vietnã para viver seus últimos dias na cidade central de Hue, a antiga capital e seu local de nascimento, depois de passar grande parte de sua vida adulta no pioneiro do budismo no Ocidente, ele formou o mosteiro “Plum Village” na França e falou regularmente sobre a prática da atenção plena – identificar e distanciar-se de certos pensamentos sem julgamento – para o mundo corporativo e seus seguidores internacionais.“Você aprende a sofrer. Se você sabe sofrer, você sofre muito, muito menos. E então você sabe como fazer bom uso do sofrimento para criar alegria e felicidade”, disse ele em uma palestra de 2013.“A arte da felicidade e a arte do sofrimento andam sempre juntas”.Nascido Nguyen Xuan Bao em 1926, Thich Nhat Hanh foi ordenado monge quando o revolucionário fundador do Vietnã moderno Ho Chi Minh liderou os esforços para libertar o país do Sudeste Asiático de seus governantes coloniais Nhat Hanh, que falava sete idiomas, lecionou nas universidades de Princeton e Columbia, nos Estados Unidos, no início dos anos 1960. Ele retornou ao Vietnã em 1963 para se juntar a uma crescente oposição budista à Guerra EUA-Vietnã, demonstrada por protestos de autoimolação por vários monges.“Vi comunistas e anticomunistas matando e destruindo uns aos outros porque cada lado acreditava que tinha o monopólio da verdade”, escreveu ele em 1975. “Minha voz foi abafada pelas bombas, morteiros e gritos.”“Como um pinheiro”No auge da Guerra do Vietnã, na década de 1960, ele conheceu o líder dos direitos civis Martin Luther King Jr., a quem persuadiu a se manifestar contra o chamou Thich Nhat Hanh de “apóstolo da paz e da não-violência” e o nomeou para o Prêmio Nobel da Paz.“Eu pessoalmente não conheço ninguém mais digno do Prêmio Nobel da Paz do que este gentil monge budista do Vietnã”, escreveu King em sua carta de estava nos Estados Unidos para se encontrar com King um ano antes, o governo sul-vietnamita proibiu Thich Nhat Hanh de voltar para monge Haenim Sunim, que já atuou como tradutor de Thich Nhat Hanh durante uma viagem à Coreia do Sul, disse que o mestre Zen era calmo, atencioso e amoroso.“Ele era como um grande pinheiro, permitindo que muitas pessoas descansassem sob seus galhos com seu maravilhoso ensinamento de atenção plena e compaixão”, disse Haemin Sunim à Reuters. “Ele foi uma das pessoas mais incríveis que eu já conheci”.Os trabalhos de Thich Nhat Hanh e a promoção da ideia de atenção plena e meditação desfrutaram de uma popularidade renovada à medida que o mundo se recupera dos efeitos de uma pandemia de coronavírus que matou mais de um milhão de pessoas e aumentou a vida cotidiana.“A esperança é importante, porque pode tornar o momento presente menos difícil de suportar”, escreveu Thich Nhat Hanh. “Se acreditarmos que amanhã será melhor, podemos suportar as dificuldades hoje”.“Se você puder se abster de ter esperança, poderá trazer-se inteiramente para o momento presente e descobrir a alegria que já está aqui.”
ghet anh thich anh