TLDR: Living Gems is the world's largest collection of Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh's teachings—nearly 3,000 dharma talks, Q&As, guided meditations, and archival recordings spanning the last 25-30 years of his teaching career. Built over nearly three years by a growing team of developers, digitization specialists, and 80+ volunteer transcript reviewers, the project solves a critical access problem: Thay's teachings, though recorded, were scattered across VHS tapes, mini discs, audio formats, and personal collections worldwide. Living Gems makes these teachings discoverable through searchable segments, multilingual transcription, and community-driven corrections—ensuring that anyone, anywhere, can access unfiltered direct wisdom without feeling they missed meeting him in person.
What Problem Does Living Gems Solve?
For decades, Thich Nhat Hanh's recorded teachings existed in fragmented form. The recordings were real—audio and video spanning the final 25 or 30 years of his teaching career—but they were not accessible in any organized way. Someone might have a VHS tape in a drawer. A center in China might possess a recording from a teaching tour. A devotee in America might hold a minidisc. The wisdom was there, but impossible to find.
The sheer volume of material created a secondary problem: each dharma talk typically runs 1-2 hours long. To watch the entire archive would take a year of continuous viewing, day and night. No practitioner could reasonably navigate such a collection. The technological challenge, then, was not just digitization but discoverability. As the team describes it, they needed to make these teachings accessible not just as whole talks, but within each talk, so that anything relevant to a practitioner's life could be searched and found immediately.
How Are the Teachings Made Searchable?
The core innovation behind Living Gems is granular segmentation. Rather than leaving each 1-2 hour talk as a single, unsearchable file, the team splits each video into smaller portions and makes those portions individually searchable. This means a practitioner can search for a specific teaching concept—on anger, on family relationships, on meditation technique—and find not just which talk it appears in, but the exact moment within that talk where Thay addresses it.
To achieve this, the team built a "complicated stack" of technologies. Transcription must follow Plum Village's precise style standards, using correct Sanskrit terminology, capturing written elements like Chinese characters on whiteboards, and reflecting Thay's native Vietnamese teachings with full nuance. The system then allows the entire community to suggest corrections and improvements to transcripts, descriptions, and titles—a Wikipedia-like model that keeps the archive maintained and accurate over time. This distributed approach means the archive itself becomes a living tool, continuously refined by practitioners worldwide rather than locked behind institutional gatekeeping.
What Was the Digitization Challenge?
Before content could be searchable, it had to exist in digital form. The team faced a materials archaeology problem: friends from around the world had been sending in archive tapes collected over decades. These came in dozens of formats—VHS tapes, smaller camera formats, audio-only recordings, and modern mini discs. Each format degraded differently. Each required different handling.
One digitization specialist describes using specialized video capture devices to bypass the processing circuitry in standard video players, capturing the raw magnetic signal directly from video heads. This allows recovery of image quality from tapes that conventional workflows cannot handle—tapes degraded beyond standard repair. The work is meticulous: denoising, deinterlacing, audio cleanup, format conversion. What began as one person's effort has expanded to involve two years of continuous work by a growing digitization team, with thousands of tapes already converted and thousands more remaining.
The emotional weight of this work comes through clearly in the transcript: digitizing Thay's teachings—not Christmas videos, though those too—represents "a chance to do something beneficial to the whole world." The specificity of that mission drives the precision of the technical work.
Why Does Vietnamese Language Matter?
Some of Thich Nhat Hanh's richest and deepest teachings occurred when he spoke in Vietnamese, his native language. Teaching in a second language, even with great fluency, necessarily filters and simplifies. Teaching in one's native tongue allows for the full texture of meaning, the play of concepts, the cultural resonance that gives dharma its depth.
Living Gems preserves these Vietnamese dharma talks in full. More than that, it pairs them with searchable English and French subtitles, and plans to add many more languages. This ensures that practitioners worldwide can access teachings delivered in Thay's own voice and language, while still understanding them. The ability to search within Vietnamese teachings and immediately see their English translation underneath represents a direct bridge to Thay's unfiltered wisdom—no interpreter needed, no intermediate meditation teacher required. The dharma comes directly into the heart.
How Did the Team Grow and Organize?
The project began small—a single developer, then three, then four. As the scope became clear, the team grew to meet the challenge. Over the last year alone, more than 80 volunteers have contributed specifically to reviewing and refining transcripts. This is not a professional staff project handed down from above; it is a sangha offering, work done by people moved by the dharma itself.
The team's growth reflects a deeper principle: this is "a tool maintained by the entire community," as the transcript states. The developers build the infrastructure. The digitizers preserve the material. The volunteers ensure accuracy and completeness. No single person could do this. It requires collective intelligence, distributed labor, and sustained motivation.
What Does Direct Access Mean?
One of the most poignant motivations emerges in the transcript: "We didn't miss out. We were there. We could have been on that tour. We could have been in that hall." Living Gems provides unfiltered, direct access to teachings recorded during actual tours in China, America, and other countries—real encounters between Thich Nhat Hanh and his audience, not secondhand accounts or interpretations. For practitioners who never met him in person, this archive offers something close: his actual voice, his actual presence, his responses to real questions from real people.
This is not nostalgia. It is dharma transmission. Every teaching, every word, every pause carries the force of his intention. By making these moments accessible, searchable, and understandable across language barriers, Living Gems honors the principle of direct pointing to the truth.
How Is Living Gems Sustained?
The project requires ongoing resources: server infrastructure, digitization equipment, developer time, translator costs, and ongoing improvements. The team has created a sliding-scale contribution model, acknowledging that supporters have different capacities. Higher-tier contributions support many people and many aspects of the work. Even smaller gifts sustain the servers, the equipment, and the team's ability to continue digitizing material and improving audio and video quality.
The underlying message is clear: this is not a finished product. There is more material to digitize, more audio to clean, more languages to add, more features to build than anyone currently imagines. Each contribution, at any scale, keeps this work alive and responsive to the evolving needs of practitioners worldwide.
Where to Go from Here
If you are drawn to Thich Nhat Hanh's teachings but have found it hard to know where to begin, Living Gems solves that problem. Search for a concept that is alive in your life right now—mindfulness, compassion, suffering, family relationships, engaged Buddhism—and you will find the exact moments where Thay addresses it. If you speak Vietnamese, you can hear his teachings in their full native resonance. If you want to support the preservation and accessibility of dharma teachings for future generations, the project welcomes contributions at whatever scale you can offer. Visit plumvillage.org/gems/ to explore the archive, learn more about the project, and discover how you might participate in keeping these teachings alive.




