Early years Hōun Jiyu-Kennett was born as Peggy Teresa Nancy Kennett in
St Leonards-on-Sea,
Sussex,
England on January 1, 1924. As a young woman she found herself questioning
gender roles in society and grew to become disillusioned with
Christianity. She studied
medieval music at
Durham University and then received a scholarship to
Trinity College of Music in
London, England. Though attracted to
Buddhism, she felt during this period that she was called to serve the
Church of England as a priest. However, church policies at the time did not allow women to be ordained, and this enhanced her previous disillusionment with Christianity.
Training at Sojiji She first became interested in
Theravada Buddhism during this period of questioning and searching, joining the
London Buddhist Vihara. In 1954, she joined the London
Buddhist Society, where she continued her Buddhist studies and lectured. While there, she met the scholar
D.T. Suzuki, and developed a strong interest in
Rinzai Zen Buddhism. In 1960, when chief abbott
Kōho Keidō Chisan Zenji of
Sojiji in
Japan came to the society, she was asked to make the arrangements for his stay. Koho asked if she would consider becoming his student back in Japan. She accepted the offer, and two years passed before she arrived at Sojiji to study
Soto Zen Buddhism under him. In January 1962, Kennett traveled to
Malaysia to accept an award she had been honored with for setting a Buddhist hymn, "Welcome Joyous Wesak Day" by
Sumangalo, to music. Before leaving for Japan, Kennett was ordained a
novice nun by Venerable Seck Kim Seng (釋金星;
Shì Jīnxīng) in the
Linji Chan school and given the
Buddhist name Jiyu (慈友,
Cíyou in Chinese,
Jiyu in Japanese) meaning
compassionate friend. Jiyu-Kennett arrived in Japan in 1962, where she was also ordained in the Soto-school, and trained at
Sōjiji from 1962 to 1963. Formally, Kōho Keidō Chisan Zenji was her teacher, but practically, one of Keido Zenji's senior officers, Suigan Yogo
roshi, was her main instructor, because 'Keido Zenji was often preoccupied with administrative affairs. She received
Dharma transmission twice, from Kōho Keidō Chisan Zenji on May 28, 1963, but also from Suigan Yogo. While training at Sōjiji, Kōho Keidō Chisan let her take care of westerners who were interested in Zen training, mostly from American military bases, and she "developed a regular programme of teaching and meditation to nurture their growing interest in Zen". Eventually, she received the official title of "Foreign Guest Hall Master" from Keido Chisan. Jiyu-Kennett continued her institutional career by becoming an
Oshō, i.e. "priest" or "teacher". Her
Zuise ceremony was conducted in public in
Japan. Previously, women's ceremonies were held in private, but Koho had decided that the practice of holding private ceremonies for women and public ceremonies for men was wrong. According to Jiyu-Kennett's account, Following her
Zuise ceremony, Jiyu-Kennett was installed as
shinzan (head priest) of Unpukuji temple in
Mie prefecture.
Return to the west After the death of Chisan Koho, in November 1967, the Soto Administration Section became ambivalent to her, and "Kennett's title of Foreign Guest Hall Master was deleted from the list of Sojiji office appointments". Nevertheless, according to Jiyu-Kennett, she "received a certificate asking me to become the official pioneer missionary of the Soto Sect in America" just before she left Japan for a lecturing tour the US in November 1969, At this time Jiyu-Kennett was not in good health, as during her time in Japan she had experienced many illnesses. In 1969, Jiyu-Kennett founded the Zen Mission Society in San Francisco, and in 1970
Shasta Abbey in
Mount Shasta, California, the first Zen monastery in the United States to be established by a woman. In 1972, Jiyu-Kennett's British chapter of the Zen Mission Society established
Throssel Hole Priory in
Northumberland,
England. In 1978 Jiyu-Kennett changed the name of the Zen Mission Society to the Order of Buddhist Contemplatives.
Illness and visions In 1975, Jiyu-Kennett was stricken with illness yet again, and this time she became bedridden. In 1976, worn out and convinced death was near, she resigned from her position as abbess of Shasta Abbey and went into retreat in
Oakland, California. Still rather ill, of unknown causes, she had her student Daizui MacPhillamy with her often to tend to her care. Following a
kensho experience he had, she conferred
Dharma transmission to him at her bedside in 1976. During this retreat, Jiyu-Kennett had a prolonged religious experience, including a series of visions and recalling past lives. She regarded these experiences as "a profound kensho (enlightenment) experience", constituting a third kensho, and published an account of these visions, and an elaborate scheme of stages of awakening, in
How to Grow a Lotus Blossom. Her interpretations, which parallel Christian mysticism, were controversial, and rejected by some as
makyo ("illusion").
Stephen Batchelor describes these episodes, Around four months into her 'third kensho', Jiyu-Kennett regained her health and again assumed her position as Abbess of Shasta Abbey for the next 20 years until her death on November 6, 1996. According to Jiyu-Kennett, her experiences are not uncommon, but are rarely spoken of; she regarded publishing her own experiences as a way to acknowledge the existence and validity of such experiences, which, according to her, may contribute to further insight after initial awakening. She acknowledged the risks and potential for controversy in publishing her account, but felt that the benefits of releasing such information outweighed the risks. According to Kay, "Kennett's visionary experiences – and also her ambivalence about the status of their content – are not unprecedented within the Zen tradition. Soto literature includes numerous accounts, as noted especially by Faure (2000)
Visions of power, described by the founders of Soto Zen, Dogen and Keizan. Dogen and Keizan "also both warned against seeing visions or unusual spiritual experiences as the goal of practice". but were clear that such things can occur along the way. ==Teachings==