Female Buddhas: A Revolution for Nuns in the Plum Village Tradition
Women, including nuns, have long played an important role in supporting and affirming Thich Nhat Hanh’s (Thay’s) vision for a renewed, engaged form of Buddhism.
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Women, including nuns, have long played an important role in supporting and affirming Thich Nhat Hanh’s (Thay’s) vision for a renewed, engaged form of Buddhism.
Much of what Thay accomplished as a Zen teacher, social activist, and emissary to the West was possible because he had the support and trust of people like Sister Chan Khong, who was at his side nearly from the beginning of his public teaching life. In fact, the first three disciples ordained by Thay were nuns: Sister Chan Khong, Sister Chan Duc and Sister Chan Vị. Today, more than half of all International Plum Village monastic practitioners are women.
This mutual respect and deep understanding of the nature of interbeing led, in 2005, to a remarkable (by traditional standards) gesture by Thay that set a new standard for equity within his monastic community.
That year, Thay, Sister Chan Khong, and a large delegation of monastics and lay practitioners traveled to Vietnam for the first time following Thay’s thirty-nine years in exile. During the Lunar New Year celebration, Thay stood up in the first row with many venerable monks, while the nuns sat still with joined palms. One monk read aloud a text recognizing the presence of Avalokiteshvara, the Bodhisattva of Great Compassion, in every nun, and declaring the vow to practice their precepts properly to protect themselves and the nuns.
To the great surprise of Venerable monks at Thay’s side, Thay then prostrated three times in front of the nuns. It would never have occurred to these monks to show such a sign of reverence to nuns, but they followed Thay’s example. Although this was standard practice in International Plum Village monasteries, prostrating before nuns was an incredibly powerful, humbling, and transformational moment for the monastic tradition in Vietnam.
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Before his passing earlier this year, Thay, Sister Chan Khong, and many other International Plum Village monastics made many other revolutionary changes for nuns in the International Plum Village Tradition, granting them status, voice, and influence equal to that of monks. Some of these major changes include:
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Finally, a growing number of Dharma books being published by Parallax Press are written or co-written by nuns in the Plum Village community, including Zen and the Art of Saving the Planet, written by Thay and coauthored by Sister Chan Khong and Sister True Dedication; Learning True Love: Practicing Buddhism in a Time of War and Beginning Anew: Four Steps to Restoring Communication, by Sister Chan Khong; Flowers in the Dark: Reclaiming Your Power to Heal Trauma through Mindfulness, Mindfulness as Medicine: A Story of Healing Body and Spirit, and Healing: A Woman’s Journey from Doctor to Nun, by Sister Dang Nghiem; and Mindfulness: Walking with Jesus and Buddha and True Virtue: The Journey of an English Buddhist Nun by Sister Annabel Laity.
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Thay and Sister Chan Khong have emphasized that members of our sangha should be valued and respected because of our practice, not because of our gender. This revolutionary position has attracted many women to ordain in the community. International Plum Village practices and ways of life have empowered young sisters in their practice and have shifted how they view themselves. These practices will continue to influence the way future disciples are trained, offering more space, trust and voice to women.