
Weekly Activity
Saturday
3:30 – 4:30 PM: Basic Zen Session for Kids
4:30 – 5:30 PM: Basic Zen Session for Adults
Pictures of Youth Zen Training
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Sunday
2:00 – 3:00 PM: Yoga Exercise Class
2:30 – 3:30 PM: Zen session for children from age 5 and up
3:30 – 5:30 PM: Dharma Lecture and
Discussion |
Miscellaneous :
About Thanksgiving Ceremony: Thanksgiving Ceremony
***In memory of the Zen Master Phillip
Kapleau (1912 – 2004): The Shout
of a Zen Master
***Master Hakuin Chant In Praise Of Zazen:
Chant In Praise Of Zazen
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often for updated activity. For more information and/or participation,
please contact Sung Nghiem Zen Center (phone: 714-636-0118,
e-mail: sungnghiem@hotmail.com).
The Shout of a Zen Master
Zen Master Phillip Kapleau, founder of Rochester
Zen Center in New York and author of many Zen books in which
“The Three Pillars of Zen” is among one of the
most famous and read books written by the Zen Master, had
returned to the eternal realm on May 6, 2004 while being surrounded
by family, friends and Zen students.
It was a beautiful day filled with calm sunrays
in the lovely garden of the Rochester Zen Center.
Sat in his wheelchair and surrounded by family,
friends and students, Zen Master Kapleau was taken into the
Rochester Zen Center garden where he spent more than forty
years of transmitting the Zen method directly to his students.
From the time he was physically feeble, he had been taken
to this garden on a daily basis. Then on that day, under the
serene of the earth and sky and the calmness of the atmosphere,
suddenly, the Zen Master shouted repetitiously, extraordinary
sounds of scream as if to move the earth and sky.
The Zen Master continued to shout for about
ten minute times. Was his scream implying a supreme thought
that manifested a sacred life energy unending in him? Such
life energy is inherent within us and all sentient beings.
To display such power during the moment of near death as people
usually refer to! Only the Zen Master and people who understood
or understanding Zen can penetrate and admire this fantastic
esoteric thought because it was the shout of reminding, the
shout of awakening. The shout directed toward teaching the
students, family and our whole entity: “Sound, sound…
no sound… transcending sound and no sound”.
The shout had echoed in this generation and
will continue to echo through many generations to come.
The shout truly quaked the earth and sky. The
sacred shout filled with the power of life energy. It was
the sound of lion’s roar yet filled with compassion
and responsibility of a Zen Master upon the completion of
his teaching even in his final breath to his students and
to all sentient beings.
During the ten-minute time with the echoing
sounds of scream, his students kept silence and respectfully
listened… And then, together, they suddenly chanted
“The Heart Sutra”. When the chantings arose with
several verses, the Zen Master opened his eyes widely, radiantly
and stopped shouting. Then, his eyes slowly closed and forever
closed from that moment on. “Sound, sound… no
sound… transcending sound and no sound”.
The fearless characteristic and integrity of
Zen Master Kapleau acknowledged that he had attained the self-determination
and complete independence from himself and circumstance. He
is one who completely penetrated the notion of have, have
not, presence and absence of life and transcended this notion
of have, have not, presence and absence. Until the very last
moment prior to his departure from this life, he still shouted
loudly the sound of grandeur to awaken the remaining people
“here is the true nature inherent within us”.
He still shouted loudly the sound extraordinaire to remind
the later generations to relieve all delusions and return
to our own radiant wisdom.
He had shouted the final sound to shove the
student onto the enlightened shore.
Upon recollection, Zen Master Kapleau was borned
in 1912 in Connecticut, studied law and became a court reporter.
In 1945, Zen Master Phillip Kapleau came to Japan as a reporter
for the court sessions on war crimes. It was mainly the brutal
and horrific aspects of war during World War II era that deeply
effected and awakened the spirituality in the life of Zen
Master Phillip Kapleau.
Returned to New York in 1950, Phillip Kapleau
studied Buddhism under Zen Master Suzuki, but he still not
yet satisfied his fulfillment. In 1953, Phillip Kapleau decided
to resign from his jobs in court and moved to Japan to study
the religion.
Resided in Japan for 13 years and studied under
the guidance of three Zen Masters, he finally received the
seal of approval by Zen Master Hakuun Yasutani (White Cloud)
in 1965. Mainly within the period of studying under Zen Master
Hakuun Yasutani, Roshi Phillip Kapleau completed the book
“The Three Pillars of Zen”, one of the most valuable
books recognized as the basic principles for those who are
in search of understanding and practicing Zen. This worldwide
renowned book was also translated into 12 languages in which
there was the Vietnamese translation done by Do Dinh Dong
and was re-published recently by Sung Nghiem Zen Center in
California.
Studied and practiced among the Zen centers
of the Soto (Tao Dong) and Rinzai (Lam Te) schools, upon returning
to New York, Zen Master Kapleau transmitted all of his experience
to his students. He was recognized as one of the first teachers
to transmit the Zen method in the United States. The Rochester
Zen Center was quickly established and progressed. Zen Master
Kapleau was often invited to expound on Zen at many places
in the world. Everywhere he went, the Zen Master brought to
the listeners much new learning on the mind awakening, a vitality
that can only be obtained by realization not by rationalization
or any other ways.
Reported by Trinh Gia
My
(The Vietnamese People
newspaper, number 6810, July 30, 2004)
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