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Hardcover Creating True Peace: Ending Violence in Yourself, Your Family, Your Community, and the World Book

ISBN: 0743245199

ISBN13: 9780743245197

Creating True Peace: Ending Violence in Yourself, Your Family, Your Community, and the World

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Book Overview

Creating True Peace is both a profound work of spiritual guidance and a practical blueprint for peaceful inner change and global change. It is Thich Nhat Hanh's answer to our deep-rooted crisis of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Conflict Resolution, Mindfulness and Expanded Sangha

I cannot praise this book or author enough. It and he are truly inspirational. Thich Nhat Hanh is an incredible teacher who writes clearly and provides personal short stories as examples to leave the reader with lucid understanding of the message of placing yourself in the other person's shoes. Listening, speaking kindly, and taking the time to become calm, and to mindfully resolve suffering and conflict in a peaceful and lasting manner. He encourages us to practice Mindfulness meditation and to inter-be and create a special safe room in your homes as a sanctuary for peace, calmness, mindfulness, and resolution of conflict. On page 172 in the author's own words, he says: "We need to look deeply to see what we are now doing with our lives. We let individualism prevail in the twentieth century, and frankly we have made a mess out of it. We must begin anew for the twenty first century; we need a new different direction. We can no longer continue to destroy ourselves and the planet we live on. With determination we can abandon the cult of individualism and the self, and act and live in harmony in the spirit of interbeing. The sangha, the spiritual community, is our new direction, and sangha building is the noblest task we have before us. To build a sangha, we have to learn to open ourselves to each other and to share our experiences, insights, time, and love. The sangha must be our refuge for all of us in this new century." This author spends absolutely no time trying to convert anyone to his religion. Instead he spends his life promoting non-violent co-existence methods and a vision of appreciation of the miracle of all life. This is a book of hope and understanding. Buy it now and you will be so happy that you did.

A reality Check

Creating true peace is one of those books that you can read with time. No need to hurry. The entire book radiates serenity, as do all Thich Nhat Hanh's books anyway. I especially admire his simple ways of confronting us with our behavior, and his encouragements to evaluate the way we treat ourselves and those around us. Mindfulness is a simple concept, yet so easy to deviate from in our daily activities. Reading this and other books from Thich Nhat Hanh helps you to refocus on the things that are really important. A strong work for those who seek tranquility in a hectic society.

Socially Engaged Buddhism

To some peace and nonviolence are synonymous with frailty and submissiveness; yet not to our beloved Thich Nhat Hanh. For him, to practice peace, to make peace alive within us, is synonymous with cultivating understanding, love, and compassion - even in the face of misunderstanding and war. He reiterates that practicing peace, especially in times of war, takes above all: courage. Thich Nhat Hanh should know, for he's survived 3 wars, harassment, and more than 30 years in separation from his native homeland of Vietnam. This book stems from his experiences as a Buddhist monk striving towards peace, who happens to have written over 100 books and is a world leader when it comes to speaking out against violence and war. The range of lives he`s touched with his message, from a variety of cultures and backgrounds, is absolutely staggering. Thay's writings always have a no-nonsense and functional characteristic to them. Many of the practices you'll find in this particular work are lessons he has sharpened in his monastic living community in France - Plum Village. He is at the forefront of "socially engaged" Buddhism, viewing meditation and social activism as being on the same ticket.War and peace are both within us, like that cliché symbol we are familiar with from the east of the yin and the yang; a prospect he touches on in his world famous poem, "Call Me By My True Names." Those of us familiar with Nhat Hanh's works probably notice a core theme which breathes through all of his works: practicing peace not just towards all beings, but likewise with our emotions and inner struggling. In this book he does not shy away from criticizing the Unites States and it's present actions in the world, mentioning the United Nations , "each of us depends on the well-being of the entire human population." This is Thich Nhat Hanh at his very best, and it's my hope every reader will encounter this truly magnificent work.

practical advice to bring about peace

Once again Thich Nhat Hanh has provided a very practical guide to bringing about peace in our lives. As the title says first we must end violence in ourselves, then our families, our communities and finally the world. The book is filled with concrete suggestions for what we can do to reach these goals and examples of how these methods have worked for others. It is a book filled with a simple wisdom that can't be challenged. Along with the books, ANGER: WISDOM FOR COOLING THE FLAMES and NO DEATH, NO FEAR, Thich Nhat Hanh has given us three jewels which will help us live better, happier lives and bring us closer to the end of our own suffering.

Simplicity Engenders Peace

If you are one of those who feels you never have a moment's peace, then it's obvious that you need to simplify your life. While Thich Nhat Hanh is considered the world's foremost peace activist, he is perhaps its foremost simplicity activist as well and a prime example that simplicity engenders peace. He is a simple monk who leads a plain and simple life and writes the same way. I have always admired his style for its ease and clarity in pointing to the plain truths behind the often didactic tenants of Buddhism. Using very clear and yet subtle metaphors and personal anecdotes, he points to the basic truths beyond the dicotomies of the sutras and koans. In fact, many academicians, scholars and Buddhist teachers would do well to emulate his style. Because Nhat Hanh's writing is so simplistic, many pass off his ideas as being too naïve. After all, how can anyone ever hope to achieve world peace? But Nhat Hanh's writing is deceptive in its subtlety. In his newest book, CREATING TRUE PEACE: Ending Violence in Yourself, Your Family, Your Community, and the World , Nhat Hanh teaches how the seed of peace planted within one individual with proper nurturing can bloom into a peaceful family and then a peaceful community and later a peaceful country, and finally turn the entire world into a garden of peace. CREATING TRUE PEACE is a compilation of his teachings from other works such as Peace Is Every Step, Miracle of Mindfulness, and Interbeing to name a few. As usual, he uses metaphors, personal anecdotes, commentaries and meditations, many from past lectures and texts, to show us how such an improbable task is truly possible. He discusses his usual topics: breathing, sitting and walking meditation, the five mindfulness trainings, listening and more. But unlike some of his earlier works, this one presents practical, step-by-step methods for getting along with oneself, one's mate and children, one's neighbors and co-workers and one's country as well as a Manifesto for World Peace and some previously unpublished mindfulness trainings, which Nhat Hanh has developed over the years. Although his writing is simplistic that doesn't mean it should be taken literally. One still must find one's own path through the violence that exists in the world today. He uses the metaphor of a lotus that grows in mud to show how the practice of acceptance can lead to peace even in a world of turmoil and upheaval. .Nhat Hanh believes the seed of peace begins with mindfulness. Especially, we need to be mindful consumers. We must watch for the consumption of that which leads to unmindfulness like alcohol or violence in the media. However, even these remain open to interpretation. I doubt if Nhat Hanh would seriously tell us to avoid Shakespeare's Macbeth or even Kubrick's classic Clockwork Orange.I was particularly fascinated by Nhat Hanh's discourse on Interbeing. Here, he turns to the insect kingdom for his analogy, relating the interaction of worker bees to
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