Gotō Zuigan
Gotō Zuigan was a Buddhist Rinzai Zen master the chief abbot of Myōshin-ji and Daitoku-ji temples, and a past president of Hanazono University in Kyoto, also known as "Rinzai University".
Biography
Zuigan was influential in the development of Buddhism in America in the early 20th century. He was a student of the Zen master Tetsuo Sōkatsu and followed him to California in 1906 with a group of fourteen who went to the United States with Tetsuo Sōkatsu in 1906, attempting strawberry farming in Hayward, California, and founding a branch of Ryomo Kyokai on Sutter Street in San Francisco.Zuigan returned to Japan in 1910. In 1916, Sōkatsu bestowed upon him the Inka Shōmei. He then spent fifteen years as a missionary in Seoul.
Later, he returned to Japan and taught at the temple Daitoku-ji in Kyoto.
Notable students
Among Zuigan's notable students were:- The American religious scholar Huston Smith who studied with Zuigan for fifteen years.
- Pianist Walter Nowick who studied with Zuigan at Daitoku-ji beginning in 1950 until Zuigan's death in 1965.
- Sōkō Morinaga, Nowick's Dharma brother, who wrote in "Novice to Master: An Ongoing Lesson in the Extent of My Own Stupidity", who was also a head of Hanazono University.
- The Dutch author Janwillem van de Wetering who lived a year and a half in Daitoku-ji with Nowick under Zuigan's successor Oda Sessō, and described this period of study in the book, "The Empty Mirror: Experiences in a Japanese Zen Monastery".