- Hugo Enomiya-Lassalle
Aiun-ken Hugo Makibi Enomiya-Lassalle (1898–1990) was one of the foremost teachers to embrace both
Roman Catholic Christianity andZen Buddhism . Enomiya-Lassalle was born inGermany and was ordained as aJesuit priest. He travelled toJapan as a missionary in 1929, but became interested in that country's Buddhist practices. In 1940, he became the vicar ofHiroshima , and in 1945 he was critically wounded by the nuclear blast in that city. In 1956, Enomiya-Lassalle began studying Zen withHarada Daiun Sogaku . In 1958, he published "Zen: A Way to Enlightenment", but theHoly See ordered him not to continue publishing on the subject.Following Harada's death in 1961, Enomiya-Lassalle became an apprentice of one of Harada's students,
Yamada Koun . Yamada was enthusiastic about the possibilities of Zen as a Christian practice, believing that "Zen would become an important stream in the Catholic Church one day" [ [http://terebess.hu/english/sharf.html Terebess Asia Online] ] . With Enomiya-Lassalle's active assistance, he attracted a number of Catholic priests and nuns as students. In the late 1960s, Enomiya-Lasalle was certified as a teacher in Yamada'sSanbo Kyodan sect and given the title "roshi ", while professing his continued belief in Christianity. After 1968, Enomiya-Lassalle spent much of his time inEurope leading Zen retreats and encouraging zen practice among Christians.Lassalle publishedThe Practice of Zen Meditation in 1987.
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Heinrich Dumoulin References
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