In 1919 Nyogen received word that Shaku had died back in Japan. Around this time, he compiled the famous book
101 Zen Stories. In 1922 Nyogen scraped together enough money to rent out a hall and lecture on Zen. He continued this, moving from place to place throughout the city teaching about Zen meditation. By 1927 he had developed a small following with his "Floating
Zendo". His only material whilst going from hall to hall was a picture of
Manjusri Bodhisattva. Eventually, along with the help of some students, he managed to rent an apartment in San Francisco where he would hold practice. During this period he even had a guest speaker from Japan come to lecture, Gyudo Furukawa. Nyogen moved to Los Angeles in the 1930s, where he again rented out an apartment and continued the so-called "Floating Zendo" model. Soon Senzaki became familiar with the community of Japanese immigrants there. In 1932 he befriended a Japanese woman named Kin Tanahashi, who had a developmentally disabled boy. Nyogen cared for the boy in exchange for room and board. It was Mrs. Tanahashi who introduced Nyogen to the haiku poetry of
Soen Nakagawa, an unconventional young monk practicing in Japan, who would go on to become one of the most prominent Rinzai Zen teachers to come West. Senzaki was extremely impressed with these poems, so he contacted Soen and they began corresponding with one another. Following the
attack on Pearl Harbor and the signing of
Executive Order 9066, Senzaki was among the tens of thousands of
Japanese-Americans to be relocated to internment camps. He spent the duration of
World War II in
Heart Mountain, Wyoming. At the conclusion of the war, Senzaki moved what he called his "Floating Zendo" to
Los Angeles. While making his living in a number of ways he devoted his passion for the rest of his life to teaching Zen. Among his students at this time were
Robert Aitken, who would become one of the most significant of modern Western Zen teachers, and
Samuel L. Lewis who would later be known as a prominent Sufi teacher in the line of
Inayat Khan and Zen teacher in the lineage of Korean
Seon Master Dr. Kyung-Bo Seo. Also, Senzaki maintained his long-term correspondence with Soen Nakagawa. Senzaki died on May 7, 1958, at 81 years old. There are several versions of his "last words," one of the most compelling of which is "Remember the
Dharma! Remember the Dharma! Remember the Dharma!" == Students ==