- Houn Jiyu-Kennett
Infobox Buddhist biography
name = Houn Jiyu-Kennett
img_size =
img_capt =
landscape =
birth_name = Peggy Teresa Nancy Kennett
other_names =
dharma_name =
birth_date = birth date|1924|1|1
birth_place =St Leonards-on-Sea ,Sussex ,England
death_date = death date and age|1996|11|6|1924|1|1
death_place =Mount Shasta ,California ,United States
nationality =
denomination =
school =Soto
lineage =
title =Roshi
workplace =Shasta Abbey
education =Durham University Trinity College of Music
occupation =
teacher = Ven. Seck Kim Seng
Suigan Yogo
reincarnation_of =
predecessor = Keido Chisan Koho
successor = Daizui MacPhillamyGyokuko Carlson Kyogen Carlson James Ishmael Ford
student =
spouse =
partner =
children =
website = [http://www.obcon.org/ www.obcon.org/]
[http://shastaabbey.org/ http://shastaabbey.org/]Houn Jiyu-Kennett, (
January 1 1924 —November 6 1996 ), born Peggy Teresa Nancy Kennett, was a Britishroshi most famous for having been the first female to be sanctioned by the Soto School ofJapan to teach in the West. Jiyu-Kennett foundedShasta Abbey inMount Shasta, California in 1970 after many years spent studyingZen andBuddhism inAsia —most predominantly in Japan. Shasta Abbey was the first Soto Zen school in the United States to be established by a woman, and in 1978 Jiyu-Kennett's order became known as the Order of the Buddhist Contemplatives. After ordaining as abhikkhuni in theLin Chi school while inMalaysia , she left for Japan and trained atSojiji under Keido Chisan Koho—from whom she receivedDharma transmission from in 1963. Her order, which iscelibate , now has chapters in theNetherlands ,Canada , theWest Indies , theUnited Kingdom andGermany —in addition to the United States.Biography
Houn 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 questioninggender role s in society and grew to become disillusioned withChristianity . She studiedmedieval music atDurham University and then received a scholarship toTrinity College of Music inLondon, England .Kay, 120-121] Though attracted toBuddhism , she felt during this period that she was called to serve theChurch of England as a priest. However, policies would not allow for a woman to ordain and this ultimately enhanced her previous disillusionment with Christianity on the whole. She first became interested inTheravada Buddhism during this period of questioning and searching, joining the London Buddhist Vihara. In 1954 she joined theBuddhist Society , where she lectured and continued her Buddhist studies. She came to meet the scholarD.T. Suzuki while there, causing her to develop a strong interest inZen Buddhism . In 1960 she arranged to have Keido Chisan Koho ofSojiji inJapan to come to the society, where Koho asked if she would consider becoming his student back in Japan. Though she accepted the offer, two years passed before she finally arrived at Sojiji to study under him.In January of 1962 Jiyu-Kennett traveled to
Malaysia to accept an award she had been honored with "for setting a Buddhist hymn to music." Before leaving for Japan she was ordained by Ven. Seck Kim Seng as abhikkhuni in theLin Chi school and given theBuddhist name Sumitra, meaning "compassionate friend" (慈有, "Ciyou" in Chinese). Jiyu-Kennet arrived in Japan in 1962, where she remained until the death of her master Koho in 1969.Fowler, 164; 195] Because Koho was often preoccupied with administrative affairs, Jiyu-Kennett spent much of her time studying under Koho's senior disciple Suigan Yogoroshi . According toJames Ishmael Ford , "Jiyu Kennett Roshi received Dharma transmission twice, from both Suigan Yogo Roshi and Chisan Koho Roshi.Ford, 141-143] One of the interesting parts of Jiyu-Kennett's story is that hershiho ceremony with Koho was conducted in public inJapan , whereas previously women were more or less forced to undergo such ceremonies in private. Koho had decided that the practice of private ceremonies for women and public ceremonies for men was ultimately wrongheaded. According to her own account, "I have never done a ceremony with more terror inside me, than that one with twelve men down each side, each one with curtains drawn as if to say 'I'm not here.' Those were the witnesses. Try "that" sometime! That can be pretty scary—in a foreign country, in a language you're not one hundred percent sure of, with a lot of people who are hating your guts. And the reason Koho Zenji did it—and I've got it on tape—was for the benefit of women in his country."Boucher, 137-138]Following her transmission ceremony, Jiyu-Kennett was installed as abbess of a temple of
Mie prefecture known as Unpukuji, and by 1969 she had received authorization to begin teachingSoto Zen inLondon, England . However, before returning to England, she decided to visit theSan Francisco Zen Center inSan Francisco, California to see why the organization had become so successful. It should be noted that at this time she was not in good health, as during her time in Japan she experienced many illnesses.Batchelor, 133-134] Impressed with the quality of practice inCalifornia , Jiyu-Kennett opted to remain in California and not return home. So she founded the Zen Mission Society in a small apartment in 1969, which moved somewhere inOakland, California not long after. In 1970, " [Jiyu Kennett] then developed a feministic Zen at theShasta Abbey , founded in Northern California in 1970."Carroll, 110-11] In 1972, two years after having foundShasta Abbey in California, Jiyu-Kennett's British chapter of the Zen Mission Society established Throssel Hole Priory inNorthumberland ,England .Snelling, 206]Visions
In 1975 Jiyu-Kennett was stricken with illness yet again, and this time she had become bedridden. In 1976 she resigned from her position as abbess of Shasta Abbey and went into retreat in
Oakland, California . Still rather ill, and of unknown causes, she had her student Daizui MacPhillamy with her often to tend to her care. Following akensho experience he had, she conferredDharma transmission to him at her bedside in 1976. Not long after she began having visions, which sometimes raises questions about her mental stability—having reportedly experienced forty-three visions.Stephen Batchelor describes these episodes, "The visions lasted for 12 months, until 26 January 1977, the first twelve occurring in Oakland, the rest at Shasta, where she returned on 25 October. Each vision unfolded as a dream-like episode, charged with Western and Buddhist religious symbolism, superimposing itself on whatever she saw around her. She compared the series of visions to an elaborated contemporary version of the classical Zen images of the ten 'ox-herding' pictures. By the time the final vision faded, she was cured. She interpreted the experience as that of a 'third "kensho".'" In 1985 new rules had been implemented within the Order of the Buddhist Contemplatives that required monastics to becelibate , andGyokuko Carlson andKyogen Carlson chose to part ways with the community rather than seek adivorce . As a consequence, their center inPortland, Oregon (today's Dharma Rain Zen Center) chose to also break ties with Shasta Abbey and ultimately invited the Carlsons to remain their leaders.Teaching style
According to the book "The Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America", "Her adaptation of Zen for Westerners has been likened to Japanese Soto Zen with a flavor of the
Church of England , for she believed that Zen in North America should adopt Western monastic dress and liturgical forms. For example, she set the traditional Buddhist liturgy to music based onGregorian chant s."Skinner Keller, 641] Jiyu-Kennett had a commanding presence about her, both intellectually as well as physically. Of a rather husky build, she had a tremendous laughter and was known to be gifted at storytelling. To some, her demeanor appeared rather persistent at times, as authorJames Ishmael Ford writes, "My memories of Jiyu Kennett Roshi as a teacher are mixed. She followed in the authoritarian style of her Japanese inheritance. Interpersonally, she was remarkably invasive. Indeed, in my twenties, she pushed me into a marriage with another student that would cause great unhappiness for both of us. On the other hand, she had genuine insight into the boundless realm and also pushed me toward my own deepest experience of the great matter." Jiyu-Kennett was an advocate for equality between the sexes, and was herself swayed by the idea that women would never be deemed as equal to men if they were not understood to possess souls. According to author Catherine Lowman, "She asserts that no woman will be certain she is equal 'until she knows with the certainty that I know, that her own Buddha-nature, or her own soul, exists.'" [Lowman, 138]Bibliography
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =MacPhillamy, Daizui| title =Roar of the Tigress: The Oral Teachings of Rev. Master Jiyu-Kennett, Western Woman and Zen Master| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =2005| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/45341979&referer=brief_results| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066243
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Zen is Eternal Life| publisher =Tuttle Publishing| date =1999| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0930066200&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066200
*cite book| last =Nearman| first =Herbert| authorlink =| coauthors =Jiyu-Kennett; MacPhillamy, Daizui| title =Buddhist Writings on Meditation and Daily Practice: The Serene Reflection Meditation Tradition, Including the Complete Scripture of Brahma's Net| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1998| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0930066189&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066189
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Serene Reflection Meditation| publisher =Shasta abbey Press| date =1996| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/37372417&referer=brief_results| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066162
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =How to Grow a Lotus Blossom, Or How a Zen Buddhist Prepares for Death, 2nd edition| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1993| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34669093&referer=brief_results| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066103
*cite book| last =Keizan| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =Nearman, Hubert; Jiyu-Kennett| title =The Denkōroku, Or, The Record of the Transmission of the Light| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1993| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0930066138&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066138
*cite book| last =Nearman| first =Hubert| authorlink =| coauthors =Jiyu-Kennett; Sotoshu| title =The Monastic Office| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1993| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0930066146&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066146
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =The Liturgy of the Order of Buddhist Contemplatives for the Laity| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1987| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0930066073&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066073
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Zen Meditation| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1980| location =| pages =| url =http://books.google.com/books?id=h0o7HQAACAAJ&dq=jiyu+kennett&lr=| doi =| id = | isbn =
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =MacPhillamy, Daizui| title =The Book of Life| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1979| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0930066049&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066049
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =The Shasta Abbey Psalter| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1979| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=Shasta+Abbey+Psalter&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | oclc = 82217069
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =The Shasta Abbey Book of Ceremonies| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1979| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=Shasta+Abbey+Book+of+Ceremonies&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | oclc = 13951501
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =The Wild, White Goose: The Diary of a Zen Trainee| publisher =Shasta Abbey Press| date =1978| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0930066022&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 0930066022
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Selling Water by the River: A Manual of Zen Training| publisher =Pantheon Books| date =1972| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?qt=worldcat_org_all&q=0394467434| doi =| id = | isbn = 0394467434
*cite book| last =Jiyu-Kennett| first =| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Zen Mission Society: Scriptures & Ceremonies| publisher =J. Kennett| date =1972| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=Zen+Mission+Society%3A+Scriptures+%26+Ceremonies&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | oclc = 15989285ee also
*
Buddhism in Europe
*Buddhism in the United States
*Timeline of Zen Buddhism in the United States Notes
References
*cite book| last =Batchelor| first =Stephen| authorlink =Stephen Batchelor| coauthors =| title =The Awakening of the West: The Encounter of Buddhism and Western Culture| publisher =Parallax Press| date =1994| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30078996&referer=one_hit| doi =| id = | isbn = 0938077694
*cite book| last =Boucher| first =Sandy| authorlink =Sandy Boucher| coauthors =| title =Turning the Wheel: American Women Creating the New Buddhism| publisher =Beacon Press| date =1993| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/27684169&referer=one_hit| doi =| id = | isbn = 0807073059
*cite book| last =Carroll| first =Bret E.| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =The Routledge Historical Atlas of Religion in America| publisher =Routledge| date =2000| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0415921317&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 0415921317
*cite book| last =Fowler| first =Merv| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Buddhism: Beliefs and Practices| publisher =Sussex Academic Press| date =1999| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=1898723664&=Search&qt=owc_search| doi =| id = | isbn = 1898723664
*cite book| last =Kay| first =David N.| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Tibetan and Zen Buddhism in Britain: Transplantation, Development and Adaptation| publisher =Routledge| date =2004| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51315294&referer=one_hit| doi =| id = | isbn = 0415297656
*cite book| last =Lowman| first =Catherine| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Women's Leadership in Marginal Religions: Explorations Outside the Mainstream| publisher =University of Illinois Press| date =1993| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=0252020251&=Search&qt=results_page| doi =| id = | isbn = 0252020251
*cite book| last =Skinner Keller| first =Rosemary| authorlink =| coauthors =Rosemary Radford Ruether, Marie Cantlon| title =The Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America| publisher =Indiana University Press| date =2006| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/61711172&referer=one_hit| doi =| id = | isbn = 0253346851
*cite book| last =Snelling| first =John| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =The Buddhist Handbook: A Complete Guide to Buddhist Schools, Teaching, Practice and History| publisher =Inner Traditions| date =1991| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23649530&tab=editions| doi =| id = | isbn = 0892813199External links
* [http://www.obcon.org/ Order of Buddhist Contemplatives]
* [http://shastaabbey.org/ Shasta Abbey]
* [http://www.throssel.org.uk/ Throssel Hole Buddhist Abbey]Canada
*AB [http://www.serenereflections.ca/ Edmonton Buddhist Meditation Group]
*BC [http://www.lionsgatebuddhistpriory.ca/ Lions Gate Buddhist Priory]USA
*CA [http://www.berkeleybuddhistpriory.org/ Berkeley Buddhist Priory]
*CA [http://www.pinemtnbuddhisttemple.org/ Pine Mountain Buddhist Temple]
*OR [http://www.eugenebuddhistpriory.org/ Eugene Buddhist Priory]
*OR [http://www.portlandbuddhistpriory.org/ Portland Buddhist Priory]
*OR [http://www.wallowabuddhisttemple.org/ Wallowa Buddhist Temple]
*SC [http://www.columbiazen.org/ Columbia Zen Buddhist Priory]
*WA [http://members.ispwest.com/NCBP_OBC North Cascades Buddhist Priory]UK
* [http://www.portobellobuddhist.org.uk/ Portobello Buddhist Priory]
* [http://www.throssel.org.uk/obcreading/index.htm Reading Buddhist Priory]
* [http://www.tbpriory.org.uk/ Telford Buddhist Priory]
* [http://www.dharmacloud.org/home.htm Dharma Cloud Trust]
* [http://www.jademountains.net/ Jade Mountain]The Netherlands
* [http://www.gbconline.nl/ Gemeenschap van Boeddhistische Contemplatieven]
West Indies
* [http://www.zenislandsangha.org/ Zen Island Sangha]
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