Our Lineage

Our teachers’ teachers.

Philip Kapleau Roshi

Roshi Philip Kapleau was one of the pioneers of Zen in the West. It was his fervent wish that Zen Buddhism would be as accessible to western cultures as it had been in the East for a millennium. After a successful career as a court reporter, Philip Kapleau spent thirteen years in Japan training under three Zen masters. In 1965 he was ordained by Hakuun Yasutani-roshi and given permission by him to teach.

In 1966 he published The Three Pillars of Zen, the first book to explain the practice of Zen to Westerners. Shortly after the publication of his first book, Roshi Kapleau came to Rochester, New York to found the Rochester Zen Center. Roshi Kapleau passed away peacefully in Rochester on May 6, 2004 at the age of 91 surrounded by his disciples.  He left seven Dharma heirs, including Mitra-roshi.

In the photo above, taken in October 1986,Roshi Kapleau is standing with Mitra, whom he has just ordained as a Zen priest.

Shodo Harada Roshi

Shodo Harada  (原田 正道 Harada Shōdō, c. 1940), or Harada Rōshi, is a Rinzai priest, author, calligrapher, and head abbot of Sōgen-ji — a 300-year-old temple in Okayama, Japan. He has become known as a “teacher of teachers,” with masters from various lineages coming to sit sesshin with him in Japan or during his trips to the United States and Europe.

He was born into a Zen temple in 1940 in Nara, Japan. While still in high school he met his teacher, the Rinzai master Mumon Yamada, one day, as he was running an errand for his father to Myoshin-ji. After college he entered Shofuku-ji and began his training in 1962 under Rinzai Mumon Roshi, from whom he received Dharma transmission in 1982.

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