- Reb Anderson
Infobox Buddhist biography
name = Tenshin Reb Anderson
img_size =
img_capt =
landscape =
birth_name = Harold Anderson
other_names = Reb
dharma_name = Tenshin Zenki
birth_date = c.1943
birth_place =Mississippi
death_date =
death_place =
nationality = American
denomination =
school =Soto Zen
lineage =Shunryu Suzuki
title =Roshi
workplace =San Francisco Zen Center Green Gulch Farm Zen Center
education =
occupation =
teacher =
reincarnation_of =
predecessor =Zentatsu Richard Baker (with caveats)
successor = Ananda Claude Dalenburg, Zengyu Paul Discoe, Sobun Katherine Thanas, Jerome Petersen, Furyu Nancy Schroeder,Jiko Linda Cutts ,Taigen Dan Leighton , Myo Lahey, Setsuan Gaelyn Godwin, Kiku Christina Lehnherr, Meiya Wender, Jakujo Gary McNabb
student =
spouse = Rusa Anderson
partner =
children = Thea Anderson
website = [http://www.rebanderson.org www.rebanderson.org]Tenshin Zenki Reb Anderson (born
1943 ), born Harold Anderson, is a Senior Dharma teacher for theSan Francisco Zen Center currently living atGreen Gulch Farm Zen Center inMarin County, California . Anderson began hisZen practice at theSan Francisco Zen Center in 1967 after leaving behind studies inmathematics andpsychology . Ordained in 1970 as a priest by his teacherShunryu Suzuki , Anderson was then given theBuddhist name Tenshin Zenki 天眞全機 (meaning "Naturally Real, the Whole Works"). In 1983 Anderson receivedshiho fromZentatsu Richard Baker , becoming Baker's firstDharma heir (though Baker disputes this). From 1986 to 1988 he served as abbot of the San Francisco Zen Center and from 1988 to 1995 he served there as co-abbot withSojun Mel Weitsman . In addition to teaching at Green Gulch Farm Zen Center, he is the teacher at nearby No Abode Hermitage (see website) where he leads retreats regularly. According to authorJames Ishmael Ford , "Reb Anderson is one of the most prominent of contemporary Western Zen teachers."Ford, 127-128]Biography
Reb Anderson was born as Harold AndersonPrebish, 237] in
Mississippi in 1943 and grew up inMinnesota , developing an early interest inBuddhism while still in his teens. In his youth, he was aGolden Gloves boxer.Downing, 15-16] His father left his mother and he when Anderson was eleven.Warm Smiles from Cold Mountains; 137] In 1967 he leftgraduate school and abandoned his studies inpsychology andmathematics , coming instead to studySoto Zen underShunryu Suzuki at theSan Francisco Zen Center . Anderson was then ordained as a priest in 1970 by Suzuki, who gave Anderson theBuddhist name Tenshin Zenki (meaning "Naturally Real, the Whole Works"). [Gach, 210] In 1983 Anderson went through theshiho ceremony withZentatsu Richard Baker , the soleDharma heir of Shunryu Suzuki. However, when Baker was forced to resign as Zen Center abbot amid revelations of sexual liaisons with students, Baker claimed Anderson never completed the entire transmission ceremony. Members of the San Francisco Zen Center disagreed, and Anderson is understood to be the Dharma heir of Baker.Anderson became entangled in a strange incident that occurred in 1987 that reached back to 1983 -- a period just after
Zentatsu Richard Baker had resigned as abbot. While jogging throughGolden Gate Park one day, Anderson had deviated from the path to urinate in some bushes. There he found the corpse of a man with a bullet wound to the head and a revolver nearby. Rather than report this to the police, Anderson returned to the body over a period of several days to meditate over the corpse. On one such visit he decided to take the revolver home with him.Being Upright; 187-189] Upon his final visit he found that the body was no longer there, and a fellow priest whom he had confided in showed him a newspaper article covering the apparent suicide. Five years later (in 1988), roughly fifteen months after Anderson had become abbot of theSan Francisco , Anderson was arrested for brandishing this samefirearm in public. He reports that he had been mugged atknifepoint by a man just a block away from the San Francisco Zen Center at 300 Page Street. Anderson remembered stowing the revolver away in the San Francisco Zen Center's garage and quickly retrieved it. He then drove after the alleged mugger and followed him into a housing project with the revolver (unloaded) in hand, being arrested minutes later by a police officer with his own gun pointed at him.This 1987 incident has had a damaging impact on Anderson's reputation as a teacher, the incident having received local and national media coverage at the time of arrest. The Zen Center Board of Directors sent him on a
leave of absence for six months, and when he came back they appointedMel Weitsman as a co-abbot. Regarding this ordeal, Anderson has written, "On both a personal and a professional level, I am still dealing with the consequences of this episode. Some people felt that I had committed an irrevocable betrayal of trust, and have discounted me and my teaching ever since. Others were more forgiving, but their trust in me and my integrity was permanently shaken. Even newer students, who come to Zen Center and find out about these incidents, are sometimes confused and question whether I can be their teacher. These events are a helpful reminder--both to me and to others--of my vulnerability to arrogance and inflation. I see how my empowerment to protect and care for the Triple Treasure inflated my sense of personal authority, and thus detracted from and disparaged the Triple Treasure. This ancient twisted karma I now fully avow." In October of 1999 Anderson suffered aheart attack while conductingdokusan . Rushed to Marin General Hospital, he then underwent a successful emergencyangioplasty . [http://www.cuke.com/sangha_news/sangha.html]Teaching style
According to
James Ishmael Ford , "...Anderson Roshi is one of the first people to have worked hard to bringDogen studies West. He has also stretched much of Zen's traditional approach to psychology by drawing upon other ancient Buddhist sources, includingAbhidharma andYogachara teaching, while at the same time being solidly informed regarding Western approaches to the discipline." To some students, "...Reb's practice invites comparison to the legendary Japanese samurai, the warriors who trained in medieval Zen monasteries."Dharma heirs
Sobun Katherine Thanas received
shiho from Tenshin Roshi in 1988 and later was installed as abbess of the Santa Cruz Zen Center. Zengyu Paul Discoe and Ananda Claude Dalenburg also received shiho in 1988. Ananda was the inspiration for the character Bud Diefendorf in Jack Kerouac'sThe Dharma Bums . Anderson gaveshiho to his studentJiko Linda Cutts in 1996, who went on to serve as co-abbess of theSan Francisco Zen Center from 2000 until 2007.Skinner Keller, et al.; 643] Furyu Nancy Schroeder received shiho 1999. In 2000Taigen Dan Leighton received shiho. Leighton has since gone on to establish the Mountain Source Sangha. [http://www.mtsource.org/bios/taigenbio.html] In 2002 Meiya Wender received shiho. She now conductsjapanese tea ceremony classes at Green Gulch. [http://www.sfzc.org/zc/display.asp?catid=3,76,107&pageid=263] Kiku Christina Lehnherr and Gaelyn Godwin both received shiho in 2005, the latter of the two since receiving the Kaikyoshi degree from the Soto School ofJapan . [http://www.houstonzen.org/teachers.html]Bibliography
*cite book| last =Anderson| first =Reb| authorlink =| coauthors =Moon, Susan Ichi Su| title =Warm Smiles from Cold Mountains: Dharma Talks on Zen Meditation| publisher =Rodmell Press| date =2005| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41293740&referer=brief_results| doi =| id = | isbn = 1930485107
*cite book| last =Anderson| first =Reb| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Being Upright: Zen Meditation and the Bodhisattva Precepts| publisher =Rodmell Press| date =2001| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/44414111&referer=brief_results| doi =| id = | isbn = 0962713899Audio
*cite book| last =Anderson| first =Reb| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Basic Points of Buddhist Meditation| publisher =Big Sur Tapes| date =1993| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/30066463&referer=brief_results| doi =| id = | oclc = 30066463
ee also
*
Buddhism in the United States
*Timeline of Zen Buddhism in the United States Notes
References
*cite book| last =Anderson| first =Reb| authorlink =| coauthors =Moon, Susan Ichi Su| title =Warm Smiles from Cold Mountains: Dharma Talks on Zen Meditation| publisher =Rodmell Press| date =2005| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41293740&referer=brief_results| doi =| id = | isbn = 1930485107
*cite book| last =Anderson| first =Reb| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =Being Upright: Zen Meditation and the Bodhisattva Precepts| publisher =Rodmell Press| date =2001| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/44414111&referer=brief_results| doi =| id = | isbn = 0962713899
*cite book| last =Downing| first =Michael| authorlink =| coauthors =| title = Shoes Outside the Door: Desire, Devotion, and Excess at San Francisco Zen Center| publisher =Counterpoint| date =2001| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/search?qt=worldcat_org_all&q=1582431132| doi =| id = | isbn = 1582431132
*cite book| last =Ford| first =James Ishmael| authorlink =James Ishmael Ford| coauthors =| title =Zen Master Who?: A Guide to the People and Stories of Zen| publisher =Wisdom Publications| date =2006| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70174891&referer=one_hit| doi =| id = | isbn = 0861715098
*cite book| last =Gach| first =Gary| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =What Book!?: Buddha Poems from Beat to Hiphop| publisher =Parallax Press| date =1998| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38324499&referer=one_hit| doi =| id = | isbn = 0938077929
*cite book| last =Prebish| first =Charles S.| authorlink =| coauthors =Baumann, Martin| title =Westward Dharma: Buddhism Beyond Asia| publisher =University of California Press| date =2002| location =| pages =| url =http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/48871649&referer=one_hit| doi =| id = | isbn = 0520226259
*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
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