held in
Chicago Japanese Rinzai Zen was introduced to the United States by Japanese priests who were sent to serve local immigrant groups. A small group also came to study the American culture and way of life.
Early Rinzai-teachers In 1893,
Soyen Shaku was invited to speak at the
Parliament of the World's Religions held in
Chicago. During his talks, Shaku he challenged his mostly Christian audience's notions of religion and presented Zen Buddhism as
rational,
nontheistic, and compatible with
modern science. Sokatsu Shaku, one of Shaku's senior students, arrived in late 1906, founding a Zen meditation center called
Ryomokyo-kai. One of his disciples,
Shigetsu Sasaki, better known under his monastic name Sokei-an, came to New York to teach. In 1931, his small group incorporated as the
Buddhist Society of America, later renamed the
First Zen Institute of America. By the late 1930s, one of his most active supporters was
Ruth Fuller Everett, an American socialite and the mother-in-law of
Alan Watts. Shortly before Sokei-an's death in 1945, he and Everett would wed, at which point she took the name
Ruth Fuller Sasaki.
D.T. Suzuki D.T. Suzuki had a great literary impact. Through English language essays and books, such as
Essays in Zen Buddhism (1927), he became a visible expositor of Zen Buddhism and its unofficial ambassador to Western readers. In 1951,
Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki returned to the United States to take a visiting professorship at
Columbia University, where his open lectures attracted members of the literary, artistic, and cultural elite.
Beat Zen In the mid-1950s, writers associated with the
Beat Generation took a serious interest in Zen, including
Gary Snyder,
Jack Kerouac,
Allen Ginsberg, and
Kenneth Rexroth, which increased its visibility. Prior to that,
Philip Whalen had interest as early as 1946, and D. T. Suzuki began lecturing on Buddhism at Columbia in 1950. By 1958, anticipating Kerouac's publication of
The Dharma Bums by three months,
Time magazine said, "Zen Buddhism is growing more chic by the minute."
Contemporary Rinzai Contemporary
Rinzai Zen teachers in United States have included
Kyozan Joshu Sasaki Roshi,
Eido Tai Shimano Roshi, and
Omori Sogen Roshi (d. 1994). Sasaki founded the
Mount Baldy Zen Center and its branches after coming to Los Angeles from Japan in 1962. One of his students is the Canadian poet and musician
Leonard Cohen. Eido Roshi founded
Dai Bosatsu Zendo Kongo-ji, a training center in
New York state. Omori Roshi founded Daihonzan Chozen-ji, the first Rinzai headquarters temple established outside Japan, in Honolulu; under his students Tenshin Tanouye Roshi and Dogen Hosokawa Roshi and their dharma heirs, several other training centers were established including
Daiyuzenji in
Chicago and
Korinji in
Wisconsin. In 1998
Sherry Chayat, born in Brooklyn, became the first American woman to receive transmission in the Rinzai school of Buddhism.
Japanese Sōtō Soyu Matsuoka In the 1930s Soyu Matsuoka-roshi was sent to America by Sōtōshū, to establish the Sōtō Zen tradition in the United States. He established the Chicago Buddhist Temple in 1949. Matsuoka-roshi also served as superintendent and abbot of the Long Beach Zen Buddhist Temple and Zen Center. He relocated from Chicago to establish a temple at Long Beach in 1971 after leaving the Zen Buddhist Temple of Chicago to his dharma heir Kongo Richard Langlois, Roshi. He returned to
Chicago in 1995, where he died in 1998.
Shunryu Suzuki Sōtō Zen priest Shunryu Suzuki (no relation to
D.T. Suzuki), who was the son of a Sōtō priest, was sent to San Francisco in the late 1950s on a three-year temporary assignment to care for an established Japanese congregation at the Sōtō temple, Soko-ji. Suzuki also taught zazen or sitting meditation which soon attracted American students and "
beatniks", who formed a core of students who in 1962 would create the
San Francisco Zen Center and its eventual network of highly influential Zen centers across the country, including the
Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, the first Buddhist monastery in the Western world. He provided innovation and creativity during San Francisco's
countercultural movement of the 1960s but he died in 1971. His low-key teaching style was described in the popular book ''
Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind,'' a compilation of his talks.
Tozen Akiyama Ordained in 1974 in Japan by Tosui Ohta, came to the United States in 1983, initially posted to Zenshuji in Los Angeles. In 1985 he became the abbot of Milwaukee Zen Center, which he led and developed until 2000. He has three dharma heirs:
Jisho Warner in California, abiding teacher of Stone Creek Zen Center; Tonen Sara O'Connor in Wisconsin, former head priest of Milwaukee Zen Center; and Toshu Neatrour in Idaho.
White Plum Sangha Taizan Maezumi arrived as a young priest to serve at Zenshuji, the North American
Sōtō sect headquarters in Los Angeles, in 1956. Maezumi received dharma transmission (
shiho) from Baian Hakujun Kuroda, his father and high-ranked Sōtō priest, in 1955. By the mid-1960s he had formed a regular zazen group. In 1967, he and his supporters founded the
Zen Center of Los Angeles. Further, he received teaching permission (
inka) from Koryu Osaka – a
Rinzai teacher – and from
Yasutani Hakuun of the Sanbo Kyodan. Maezumi, in turn, had several American dharma heirs, such as
Bernie Glassman,
John Daido Loori,
Charlotte Joko Beck,
William Nyogen Yeo, and
Dennis Genpo Merzel. His successors and their network of centers became the
White Plum Sangha. In 2006
Merle Kodo Boyd, born in Texas, became the first African-American woman ever to receive Dharma transmission in Zen Buddhism.
Sanbo Kyodan Sanbo Kyodan is a contemporary Japanese Zen lineage which had an impact in the West disproportionate to its size in Japan. It is rooted in the reformist teachings of
Harada Daiun Sogaku (1871–1961) and his disciple
Yasutani Hakuun (1885–1971), who argued that the existing Zen institutions of Japan (
Sōtō and
Rinzai sects) had become complacent and were generally unable to convey real
Dharma.
Philip Kapleau Sanbo Kyodan's first American member was Philip Kapleau, who first traveled to Japan in 1945 as a court reporter for the war crimes trials. In 1953, he returned to Japan, where he met with
Nakagawa Soen, a protégé of
Nyogen Senzaki. In 1965, he published a book,
The Three Pillars of Zen, which recorded a set of talks by Yasutani outlining his approach to practice, along with transcripts of
dokusan interviews and some additional texts. In 1965 Kapleau returned to America and, in 1966, established the
Rochester Zen Center in
Rochester, New York. In 1967, Kapleau had a falling-out with Yasutani over Kapleau's moves to Americanize his temple, after which it became independent of Sanbo Kyodan. One of Kapleau's early disciples was
Toni Packer, who left Rochester in 1981 to found a nonsectarian meditation center, not specifically Buddhist or Zen.
Robert Aitken Robert Aitken was introduced to Zen as a prisoner in Japan during World War II. After returning to the United States, he studied with Nyogen Senzaki in
Los Angeles in the early 1950s. In 1959, while still a Zen student, he founded the
Diamond Sangha, a zendo in
Honolulu, Hawaii. Aitken became a dharma heir of Yamada's, authored more than ten books, and developed the Diamond Sangha into an international network with temples in the United States, Argentina, Germany, and Australia. In 1995, he and his organization split with Sanbo Kyodan in response to reorganization of the latter following Yamada's death. The
Pacific Zen Institute led by
John Tarrant, Aitken's first Dharma successor, continues as an independent Zen line.
Chinese Chan in
Ukiah, California There are also Zen teachers of Chinese Chan, Korean Seon, and Vietnamese Thien.
Hsuan Hua founded by Hsuan Hua in
Talmage, California, is geographically the largest Buddhist community in the western hemisphere. In 1962, Hsuan Hua moved to San Francisco's
Chinatown, where, in addition to Zen, he taught Chinese Pure Land,
Tiantai,
Vinaya, and
Vajrayana Buddhism. Initially, his students were mostly westerners, but he eventually attracted a range of followers.
Sheng-yen Sheng-yen first visited the United States in 1978 under the sponsorship of the
Buddhist Association of the United States, an organization of Chinese American Buddhists. In 1980, he founded the Chán Meditation Society in
Queens, New York. In 1985, he founded the Chung-hwa Institute of Buddhist Studies in Taiwan, which sponsors Chinese Zen activities in the United States.
Korean Seon in 2002
Seung Sahn was a temple abbot in
Seoul. After living in
Hong Kong and Japan, he moved to the US in 1972 (not speaking any English) to establish the
Kwan Um School of Zen. Shortly after arriving in Providence, he attracted students and founded the
Providence Zen Center. The Kwan Um School has more than 100 Zen centers on six continents. Another Korean Zen teacher,
Samu Sunim, founded
Toronto's Zen Buddhist Temple in 1971. He was head of the Buddhist Society for Compassionate Wisdom, which has temples in
Ann Arbor,
Chicago,
Toronto,
Mexico City, and
New York City, along with a retreat center in Upstate New York. Hye Am (1884–1985) brought lineage Dharma to the United States. Hye Am's Dharma successor, Myo Vong founded the Western Son Academy (1976), and his Korean disciple,
Pohwa Sunim, founded World Zen Fellowship (1994) which includes various Zen centers in the United States, such as the Potomac Zen Sangha, the Patriarchal Zen Society and the Baltimore Zen Center. Recently, Korean Buddhist monks have come to the United States to spread the Dharma. They are establishing temples and zen (Korean, 'Seon') centers all around the United States. For example, Hyeonho established the Goryosah Temple in Los Angeles in 1979, and Muil Woohak founded the Budzen Center in New York.
Vietnamese Thien in 2006 Vietnamese Zen (
Thiền) teachers in America include
Thích Thiên-Ân and
Thích Nhất Hạnh. Thích Thiên-Ân came to America in 1966 as a visiting professor at
UCLA and taught traditional Thiền meditation.
Thích Nhất Hạnh Thích Nhất Hạnh was a monk in Vietnam during the
Vietnam War. In 1966, he left Vietnam in exile and founded the
Plum Village Monastery in
France. In his books and talks, Thích Nhất Hạnh emphasizes
mindfulness (
sati) as the most important practice in daily life. His monastic students live and practice at three centers in the United States:
Deer Park Monastery in
Escondido, California,
Blue Cliff Monastery in
Pine Bush, New York, and Magnolia Grove Monastery in
Batesville, Mississippi. ==Tibetan Buddhism==