Dharma Library
A large collection of articles, from past issues of New Chan Forum and more besides.
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Basho’s “Form” on the Subject of “Emptiness”
George Marsh |Matsuo Basho was the great innovator in haiku poetry in 17th century Japan. He was also a Zen Buddhist, though he seems to have been sometimes a Buddhist priest and at other times a travelling poet, sometimes in a black robe, sometimes not. He was also an innovator in writing prose travel journals: the haibun form, which was a prose journal with haiku poems.
The haiku aesthetic was already well…
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An Interview with Rebecca Li
George Marsh and Rebecca Li |We introduce Simon Child’s second dharma heir, Rebecca Li, interviewed by Skype from New York in January 2017. She edited the text and added some content that was not covered in the interview.
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Ken Jones: In memoriam
Hilary Richards |It is with sadness that we announce the death of Ken Jones at his home in Aberystwyth on Sunday August 2nd 2015
Ken was a superb teacher and a good friend to many of us. He was a founder member of the WCF and supported Chan Master John Crook in establishing the WCF in its early years. Ken led many retreats at the Maenllwyd. His main focus for teaching was to bring the practice of Zen into…
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Meaningless that makes Sense: Working with Mu
George Marsh |Traditional koan study under a fierce Japanese Roshi is tough.
…each session had its own special terror. Novice monks were repeatedly whacked with a kyosaku that looked more like a long baseball bat. Monitors patrolled the room menacingly, taunting and poking with the stick to see if your attention would wander from Mu. But zendo drama paled in comparison to meeting Mu in the dokusan room. “What…
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David Fontana - A Memoir
John Crook |I must have met David Fontana at a psychological conference where several of us decided to form a small discussion group to have a look at the then growing interest in Meditation and Zen. We worked closely together to set up an international conference on “Psychology: East and West” in Cardiff and David and I edited and contributed to the book that followed “ Space in Mind” (Element Press, 1990).…
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For Non-beginners and Beginners Alike
Rebecca Li and David Slaymaker |We had been curious about the Western Zen Retreat after hearing about it - it was a process that had been developed by Dr. John Crook, Master Sheng Yen's (Shifu's) first Western Dharma heir. At first we thought the retreat was for beginners, only because we had been told that the retreat was a good way for those new to Chan to start their practice. But after taking part in a number of Western Zen…
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Master Yen Wai of Hong Kong
Jackson Peterson and John Crook |When I arrived in Hong Kong (1953) on my National Service during the Korean War, I soon set about trying to meet Chinese people. I wanted to follow up my reading of Buddhism carried out during the several weeks' voyage on the troop ship from Southampton. Through contacts with the HK university I met Professor Ma Meng who introduced me to a Mr Yen Shi liang, a Buddhist merchant with an embroidery…
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A Day in the Life of Bruce in Sogenji
Bruce Stevenson |Last year Bruce Stevenson took himself off to Japan for a period of practice in a Zen monastery. This was not Bruce's first such expedition but it is the first he has written about for us. Let us continue this issue then with a further account of experiences in the distant East. Bruce tells us Sogenji is, as far as he knows, the only monastery in Japan full of Westerners - well this includes a…
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Epiphany
Ken Jones |Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?T.S. Eliot - The Rock
The open door of the shabby little Hotel de la Gare. The municipal street washer has just clattered over the cobbles, freshening the air before the sun gets up. On their way to work, the locals drop in for a petit noir or a shot of something stronger. Hands are briefly shaken…
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Ten Zen Questions
Susan Blackmore |This short extract introduces you to Sue Blackmore's new book in which she puzzles her way into certain serious Zen questions. You must read it to decide whether she has solved them or not but her discussion is characteristically lively and interesting; further more it is based in retreats at Maenllwyd. We place it here for your interest and information. Eds.
The idea for "Ten Zen Questions" 1…
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