Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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Willkommen im Chinesischen Zen: Eine Einführung in die Chan Praxis
John Crook, Chuan-deng Jing-di |Chinesisches Zen
Chinesisches Zen oder Chan, wie es in China heißt - ist eine Lebensweise, welche geistige Klarheit, Mitgefühl mit allen fühlenden Wesen, und eine Art von Weisheit ermutigt, die aus der Überschreitung der Anliegen des Selbst hervorgeht. Diese kurze Einführung heißt alle willkommen, die versuchen, neue Zugänge zu persönlicher Erfahrung zu entwickeln, und schlägt auch einen Weg der…
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Welcome to Chinese Zen: An Introduction to Chan Practice
John Crook, Chuan-deng Jing-di |Chinese Zen, or Chan as it is called in China, is a way of life that encourages clarity of mind, compassion to all sentient beings and a wisdom that comes from going beyond the concerns of self. This short introduction welcomes those seeking to develop fresh approaches to personal experience and suggests a way of practice.
Buddhism
Buddhism originated in India some 2500 years ago as a result of…
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A Fellowship of Western Chan Practitioners?
John Crook, Chuan-deng Jing-di |The time seems ripe to put a suggestion to the readers of New Chan Forum that has been germinating for some time. Practitioners have often remarked that they would like some form of community based on their experience of retreats at the Maenllwyd with which they could feel closer identification. There are indeed now many people who have come and continue to come to the Maenllwyd regularly for that…
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The Place of the Dharma in Our Time
John Crook |Part I - The World We're In
Introduction
To appreciate the role that the Buddha Dharma may come to play in Western culture we need to have an understanding of the way our lives are framed by the world that both shapes us and within which we play a part. So momentous have been the changes in recent years that our suppositions about who and why we are need a constant updating. To appreciate such a…
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Silent Illumination
Martin Tebbs |The following poem was written by Martin Tebbs during the Chan retreat with Master Sheng Yen at Maenllwyd in June 1995. The last line refers the woolly socks given to Shifu by two Polish students who attended the retreat (Eds.)
Today everything is different,
Everything the same.
How is it different?
In a cloudless sky the swallows glide
effortlessly, leaving no trace;
Young lambs call and call.
How… -
Sonata
Roger Green |They said not a word
The visitor, the host
and the white chrysanthemum.
The Old Pond
A frog jumped in
Plop!
What?
...the listener who listens in the snow,
and nothing himself
Beholds nothing that is not there,
and nothing that is.
What is?
What th'? What that?What? What th'?
s,is,is,is,is,is,is,is,is
And I am. And I am that.
Neither and both
and that.
But
What is it?
What is
is, and I am
This.
What is
is and I… -
Words of a Guru
John Crook |Roger Housden was taking a tour party down the river Ganges. Half way they stopped in Lucknow and Roger took the participants to visit one of the truly insightful gurus of modern India, a man of no-nonsense clarity. All but one of his party stayed on. Even the Ganges was forgotten. Poonja is a Hindu without a label. Whether derived from Sankaracharya or the Buddha or both his thought is direct,…
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Maturity
Anonymous |Previous Western Zen Retreats have been enormously powerful and emotional experiences and I brought with me all sorts of expectations.
My koan was "What is life?" The aspect of my life that came up over and over again was to do with my work, specifically the job I am doing now, which involves four hours travelling a day and is turning out more and more to be not what I want to do.
Last summer on…
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There for the Taking - Introducing Linji
John Crook |Before we try to understand Linji, from whom our tradition derives, then are some things to be said. Linji seems strange to us; we who are used to cause and consequence and well-drawn argument. We sit and giggle over the delicious way in which the master affronts his questioners. Yet we have no understanding of why he does it. We marvel over the cleverness of a Zen paradox, but we have no insight…
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Hermit at Stallion's Rock
Ken Jones |It was a cliff overhang rather than a real cave. But the walls glowed with beautiful lichens, and at one end was a rockfall hung with ferns. I cleared out the sheep dung, set up a little shrine, cut a bed of reeds and laid out my sleeping bag. I was in business at least as a part-time hermit.
Notwithstanding two decades of tough Zen training, I still had a romantic itch for the hermit life - all…
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