- Sokei-an
Infobox Buddhist biography
name = Sokei-an Sasaki
img_size =
img_capt =
landscape =
birth_name = Yeita Sasaki
other_names =
dharma_name =
birth_date = 1882
birth_place =Japan
death_date =May 17 1945
(age 63)
death_place =
nationality =
denomination =Zen Buddhism
school =Rinzai
lineage =
title =Roshi
workplace =Buddhist Society of America
education = Imperial Academy of Art (Tokyo )
California Institute of Art
occupation =
teacher = Sokatsu ShakuSoyen Shaku
reincarnation_of =
predecessor = Sokatsu Shaku
successor =
student =
spouse = Tomé Sasaki
Ruth Fuller Sasaki
partner =
children = Shintaro
Seiko
website = [http://www.firstzen.org/ www.firstzen.org/]Sokei-an Shigetsu Sasaki (佐々木 指月 (曹渓庵),1882—
May 17 1945 ), born Yeita Sasaki(佐々木 栄多), was a JapaneseRinzai roshi who founded theBuddhist Society of America (now the First Zen Institute of America) inNew York City in 1930. Influential in the growth ofZen Buddhism in theUnited States , Sokei-an was one of the first Japanese masters to live and teach in America. One of his better known students wasAlan Watts , who studied under him briefly in the late 1930s. In June 1942 Sokei-an was arrested by theFBI , labeled an "enemy alien " and detained at aninternment camp inFort Meade, Maryland (suffering fromhigh blood pressure andstroke s while there). His students petitioned the government for his release, and he was finally released from custody in August of 1943. His health in decline, he then married American Ruth Fuller Everett. He died in May of 1945 without leaving behind aDharma heir .Biography
Sokei-an was born in
Japan in 1882 as Yeita Sasaki. He was raised by his father, aShinto priest, and his father's wife, though hisbirth mother was his father'sconcubine . Beginning at age four, his father taught him Chinese and soon had him readingConfucian texts.Stirling, 31-35] Following the death of his father when he was fifteen, he became an apprenticesculptor and came to study underJapan 's renownedKoun Takamura at the Imperial Academy of Art inTokyo .Ford, 66-67] While in school he began his study ofRinzai Zen under Sokatsu Shaku, (aDharma heir ofSoyen Shaku ), graduating from the academy in 1905. Following graduation he wasdrafted by theJapanese Imperial Army and served briefly during theRusso-Japanese War on the border ofManchuria . Sasaki was discharged when the war ended shortly after in 1906, and soon married his first wife, Tomé, a fellow student of Sokatsu.Lopez] The newlyweds followed Sokatsu toSan Francisco, California that year as part of a delegation of fourteen. The couple soon had their first child, Shintaro. In California with the hope of establishing aZen community, the group farmedstrawberries inHayward, California with little success. Sasaki then studied painting under Richard Partington at the California Institute of Art, where he metNyogen Senzaki . By 1910 the delegation's Zen community had proven unsuccessful. All members of the original fourteen, with the exception of Sasaki, made return trips back toJapan .Sokei-an then moved to
Oregon without Tomé and Shintaro to work for a short while, being rejoined by them inSeattle Washington (where his wife gave birth to their second child, Seiko, a girl). In Seattle, Sasaki worked as a picture frame maker and wrote various articles and essays for Japanese publications such as "Chuo Koron " and "Hokubei Shinpo". He traveled theOregon andWashington countrysides selling subscriptions to "Hokubei Shinpo". His wife, who had become pregnant again, moved back toJapan in 1913 to raise their children. Over the next few years he made a living doing various jobs, when in 1916 he moved toGreenwich Village inManhattan, New York . Sometime during this period he unsuccessfully tried to join theU.S. army . In New York he worked both as ajanitor and atranslator forMaxwell Bodenheim . He also began to writepoetry during his free time. He returned toJapan in 1920 to continue hiskoan studies, first underSoyen Shaku and then with Sokatsu. In 1922 he returned to theUnited States and in 1924 or 1925 began giving talks onBuddhism at the Orientalia Bookstore on E. 58th Street inNew York City , having received lay teaching credentials from Sokatsu. [http://www.firstzen.org/history.php] In 1928 he receivedinka from Sokatsu in Japan, the "final seal" of approval in theRinzai school . Then, on May 11, 1930, Sokei-an and some American students founded theBuddhist Society of America , subsequently incorporated in 1931, [Prebish, 10] at 63 West 70th Street (originally comprised of just four members). [Smith, Novack; 150-151] Here he offeredsanzen interviews and gaveDharma talks , also working on various translations of important Buddhist texts. He made part of his living by sculpting Buddhist images and repairing art forTiffany's .Stirling, 20]In 1938 his future wife, Ruth Fuller Everett, began studying under him and received her
Buddhist name (Eryu); her daughter, Eleanor, was then the wife ofAlan Watts (who also studied under Sokei-an that same year).Tweti] In 1941 Ruth purchased an apartment at 124 E. 65th Street inNew York City , which also served as living quarters for Sokei-an and became the new home for theBuddhist Society of America (opened on December 6). Following theattack on Pearl Harbor , Sokei-an was arrested by theFBI as an "enemy alien " taken toEllis Island on June 15 and theninterned at a camp inFort Meade, Maryland on October 2, 1942 (where he suffered fromhigh blood pressure and severalstroke s). [http://www.ralphmag.org/CO/the-lotus.html] He was released from theinternment camp on August 17, 1943 following the pleas of his students and returned to the Buddhist Society of America in New York City. In 1944 he divorced his wife inLittle Rock, Arkansas , with whom he had been separated for several years. Soon after, on July 10, 1944, Sokei-an married Ruth Fuller Sasaki inHot Springs, Arkansas . Sokei-an died on May 17 1945 after years of bad health. His ashes areinterred at Woodlawn Cemetery inBronx, New York .Stirling, 253-254] The Buddhist Society of America underwent a name change following his death in 1945, becoming the First Zen Institute of America.Miller, 163]Teaching style
Sokei-an's primary way of teaching
Zen Buddhism was by means ofsanzen , "an interview during which the teacher would set the student akoan " [Lachman, 114] —and hisDharma talks were often delivered in the form of ateisho . [Skinner Keller, 638] Interestingly, Sokei-an did not provide instruction inzazen or holdsesshin s at the Buddhist Society of America. His primary focus was onkoans andsanzen , relying on theHakuin system. [Watts, 134] According toMary Farkas , "Sokei-an had no interest in reproducing the features of Japanese Zen monasticism, the strict and regimented training that aims at making people 'forget self.' In these establishments, individuality is stamped out, novices move together like a school of fish, their cross-legged position corrected with an ever-ready stick." [Farkas, 1]Miscellaneous
Dwight Goddard (author of "A Buddhist Bible") has described Sokei-an as, "being from the autocratic and blunt 'old school' of Zen masters." According to writer Robert Lopez, "Sokei-an lectured on Zen and Buddhism in English. But he communicated the essence of the Buddha’s teaching and in his daily life by his presence alone, in silence, and in a radiance achieved through, as he once said, 'nature’s orders.'"
Alan Watts has said of Sokei-an, "I felt that he was basically on the same team as I; that he bridged the spiritual and the earthy, and that he was as humorously earthy as he was spiritually awakened." In his autobiography, Watts had this to say, "When he began to teach Zen he was still, as I understand, more the artist than the priest, but in the course of time he shaved his head and "sobered up." Yet not really. For Ruth was often apologizing for him and telling us not to take him too literally or too seriously when, for example, he would say that Zen is to realize that life is simply nonsense, without meaning other than itself or future purpose beyond itself. The trick was to dig the nonsense, for—as Tibetans say—you can tell the true yogi by his laugh."Watts, 135] Zen masterDae Gak has said, "Sokei-An has a good understanding of Western culture and this, combined with his enlightened perspective, is a trustworthy bridge from Zen in the East to Zen in the West. He finds that place where "East" and "West" no longer exist and articulates this wisdom brilliantly for all beings. A true bodhisattva." [cite book
title=Zen Pivots: Lectures On Buddhism And Zen
author=Sokei-An Shigetsu Sasaki
date=1998-04-01
publisher=Weatherhill
isbn=0834804166
url=http://www.amazon.com/Zen-Pivots-Lectures-Buddhism/dp/0834804166]okei-an on The Quiet Life
"Perhaps you cannot imaging such a practice as that which has been current among my people. In China or Japan, monasteries are built on a mountain top or on the edge of a cliff. From there you can see a thousand miles before your eyes. In winter, when the valley is covered with snow, you feel you are in a world of silver. No color is before your eyes. In the valley it is so quiet. In the daytime when the monks are meditating, if there is any sound in the temple it will be only that of a mouse or a rat.
"These monks are not retiring from the world; they are trying to find quietude in their minds. This state is longed for by oriental students. They try frantically to find it. Occasionally they renounce their home, or separate from wife and children to pass their lives in such a quiet place. You could not dream of men like this until you meet them. They value highly their quiet way of life. They cannot see the value of the life we are in daily contact with, our present civilization, where men hold a cigar in the right hand and a glass of whiskey in the left hand, listen to music, watch dancing, and eat delicious food. We might say that these are the two extremes of human life."
"Perhaps you will ask, what value is there in that quiet and aloof way of life. The monks would ask the same question of you. What value is there in passing your nights in a night club?" -- From a lecture Feb. 21, 1942. [cite book
title=Zen Notes Vol. 1, No. 1 January, 1954
url=http://www.firstzen.org/ZenNotesOnLine.php]okei-an on Meditation
"The Buddha founded his religion upon Samadhi. His object of meditation was his own mind. He did not meditate upon any external object, upon thoughts, or words, or ideas. He meditated simply upon mind--mind from which had been extracted every thought, every image, every concept. He paid no attention either to the outside or to the inside; he meditated upon his own mind. Perhaps we should say mind meditated upon itself, for, in true Buddhist meditation, mind by itself is the meditator and at the same time the object of the meditator's meditation."
"I think the meaning of "his own mind" is not very clear to Western people. Western people think that mind, to be mind, must have something in it; if it has nothing in it, it is not mind. But consider the mind of an infant; he doesn't know the words papa or mama, he doesn't know his own existence, he doesn't know the outside world; nevertheless he has his own mind, pure and empty. We can discover that mind in this world through meditation. The attainment of this pure and empty mind is true samadhi. And this is Buddhism."
"The Buddha practiced meditation for six years and succeeded in attaining this pure and empty mind. He did not call it God, or Mind either. He did not call it by any name. For him, Buddhism was very simple and very pure. Buddhism is like a piece of stone, or the head of a turnip. It is pure mind. If you prefer to call it soul, Buddhism is pure soul. Our teacher used to say to us when we practiced mediation: "Don't close your eyes; you will be bothered by your own thoughts. Don't keep your eyes open; you will be bothered by outside things. Keep your eyes partly closed and meditate upon your soul." This is Buddhism." -- From a lecture November 23, 1940.. [cite book
title=Zen Notes Vol. 1, No. 6 June, 1954
url=http://www.firstzen.org/ZenNotesOnLine.php]Notable students
*
Alan Watts
*Mary Farkas
*Ruth Fuller Sasaki Trivia
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