Dogen Zenji - translation to Αγγλικά
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Dogen Zenji - translation to Αγγλικά

JAPANESE ZEN BUDDHIST TEACHER
Dogen Zenji; Master Dogen; Dōgen Zenji; Eihei Dogen; Kigen Dogen; Dogen Kigen; Dogen; Ehhei Dogen; Dōgen Kigen; Eihei Dōgen
  • Dōgen watching the moon. [[Hōkyō-ji]] monastery, Fukui prefecture, circa 1250.
  • Universally Recommended Instructions for Zazen (普勧坐禅儀, ''fukan zazengi'')
  • The statue memorializing Dōgen's vision of Avalokiteshvara at a pond in Eihei-ji, Japan.

Dogen Zenji         
n. Dogen Zenji, (1200-1253) Japanse leraar en oprichter van de Sotoschool van Zen in Japan
Soto      
n. Soto, familienaam; een van de beroemde Zen sekten opgericht door Dogen Zenji (1200-1253); Hernando de Soto (1496-1542), Noord- en Zuid Amerikaanse ondekkingsreiziger en heerser, eerste Europeaan die de Missippirivier heeft bereikt

Βικιπαίδεια

Dōgen

Dōgen Zenji (道元禅師; 26 January 1200 – 22 September 1253), also known as Dōgen Kigen (道元希玄), Eihei Dōgen (永平道元), Kōso Jōyō Daishi (高祖承陽大師), or Busshō Dentō Kokushi (仏性伝東国師), was a Japanese Buddhist priest, writer, poet, philosopher, and founder of the Sōtō school of Zen in Japan.

Originally ordained as a monk in the Tendai School in Kyoto, he was ultimately dissatisfied with its teaching and traveled to China to seek out what he believed to be a more authentic Buddhism. He remained there for four years, finally training under Tiantong Rujing, an eminent teacher of the Caodong lineage of Chinese Chan. Upon his return to Japan, he began promoting the practice of zazen (sitting meditation) through literary works such as Fukanzazengi and Bendōwa.

He eventually broke relations completely with the powerful Tendai School, and, after several years of likely friction between himself and the establishment, left Kyoto for the mountainous countryside where he founded the monastery Eihei-ji, which remains the head temple of the Sōtō school today.

Dōgen is known for his extensive writing including the Shōbōgenzō (Treasury of the True Dharma Eye, considered his magnum opus), the Eihei Kōroku (Extensive Record, a collection of his talks), Japanese poetry, commentaries, and the Eihei Shingi, the first Zen monastic code written in Japan.