
'DÅgen Zenji'
'DÅgen Zenji' (é“元禅師; also 'DÅgen Kigen' é“元希玄, or 'Eihei DÅgen' 永平é“å…ƒ, or Koso Joyo Daishi) (
19 January 1200 –
22 September 1253) was a
Japanese Zen Buddhist teacher born in
KyÅto, and the founder of the
SÅtÅ school of Zen in Japan. He was a leading religious figure of his time, as well as being an important
philosopher.
Early life
DÅgen was born into a noble family. His father may have been Koga Michichika (久我é“親), a high-ranking minister in the
imperial court, while his mother was likely the daughter of Fujiwara Motofusa (藤原基房), who had once been a regent in the court
[1]. DÅgen's father died when DÅgen was three years old, and his mother when he was eight, which strongly impressed DÅgen with the
Buddhist notion of impermanence (
Japanese: 無常 ''mujÅ'').
Early training
At the age of thirteen
[2], affected by this early glimpse of impermanence and faced with the possibility of a career as part of the aristocratic
Fujiwara family, DÅgen decided to become a
monk[3]. Initially, he went to
Mount Hiei, which was the headquarters of the
Tendai school of Buddhism. Here, while studying the
Buddhist sūtras, he became possessed by a single question:
This question was, in large part, prompted by the Tendai concept of "original enlightenment" (本覚 ''hongaku''), which states that all human beings are enlightened by nature and that, consequently, any notion of achieving enlightenment through practice is fundamentally flawed
[4].
As he found no answer to his question at Mount Hiei, DÅgen left to seek an answer from other Buddhist masters. DÅgen went to visit KÅin, the Tendai abbot of
OnjÅji Temple (園城寺), asking him this same question. KÅin said that, in order to find an answer, he might want to consider studying
Chán in China
[5]. KÅin sent DÅgen to
MyÅan Eisai in KyÅto, a leading Tendai monk who had been to China and brought back the practice of
Rinzai Zen in 1191. In 1214, DÅgen went to study with Eisai at
Kennin-ji Temple (建ä»å¯º), and—upon Eisai's death the following year—he continued his study under Eisai's successor, MyÅzen (明全). In 1221
[6], MyÅzen conferred
Dharma transmission upon DÅgen, acknowledging that he had learned the teachings. Two years later, DÅgen decided to make the dangerous passage across the
East China Sea to
China to try to find an answer. His teacher MyÅzen accompanied him on the trip.
Travel to China
In China, DÅgen first went to the leading Chan monasteries in
ZhèjiÄng province. At the time, most Chan teachers based their training around the use of ''
gÅng-Ã n''s (Japanese: ''kÅan''). Though DÅgen assiduously studied the kÅans, he became disenchanted with the heavy emphasis laid upon them, and wondered why the sutras were not studied more. At one point, owing to this disenchantment, DÅgen even refused Dharma transmission from a teacher
[7]. Then, in 1225, he decided to visit a master named Rújìng (如淨; J. NyÅjo), the thirteenth patriarch of the
Cáodòng (J. SÅtÅ) lineage of Zen Buddhism, at Mount TiÄntóng (天童山 ''TiÄntóngshÄn''; J. TendÅzan) in
NÃngbÅ. Rujing was reputed to have a style of Chan that was different to the other masters whom DÅgen had thus far encountered.
Under Rujing, DÅgen realized liberation of body and mind upon hearing the master say, "Cast off body and mind" (èº«å¿ƒè„±è½ ''shÄ“n xÄ«n tuÅ luò''). This phrase would continue to have great importance to DÅgen throughout his life, and can be found scattered throughout his writings, as—for example—in a famous section of his "GenjÅkÅan" (ç¾æˆå…¬æ¡ˆ):
Shortly after DÅgen had arrived at Mount Tiantong, MyÅzen had passed away. In 1227
[8], DÅgen received
Dharma transmission and ''
inka'' from Rujing, and remarked on how he had finally settled his "life's quest of the great matter"
[9].
Return to Japan
DÅgen returned to Japan in 1227 or 1228, going back to stay at Kennin-ji
[10], where he had once trained under Eisai. Among his first actions upon returning was to write down the ''
Fukan Zazengi'' (普観å禅儀; "Universally Recommended Instructions for Zazen"), a short text emphasizing the importance of and giving instructions for ''
zazen,'' or sitting
meditation. However, tension soon arose as the Tendai community began taking steps to suppress both Zen and
JÅdo ShinshÅ«, the new forms of Buddhism in Japan. In the face of this tension, DÅgen left the Tendai dominion of KyÅto in 1230, settling instead in an abandoned temple in what is today the city of
Uji, south of KyÅto
[11]. In 1233, DÅgen founded the Kannon-dÅri-in
[12] in Uji as a small center of practice; he later expanded this temple into the KÅshÅ-hÅrinji Temple (èˆˆè–æ³•林寺). In 1243,
Hatano Yoshishige (波多義鎮) offered to relocate DÅgen's community to
Echizen province, far to the north of KyÅto. DÅgen accepted due to the ongoing tension with the Tendai community, and his followers built a comprehensive center of practice there, calling it Daibutsuji Temple (大ä»å¯º). While the construction work was going on, DÅgen would live and teach at Yoshimine-dera Temple (KippÅji, å‰å³¯å¯º), which is located close to Daibutsuji. In 1246, DÅgen renamed Daibutsuji, calling it
Eihei-ji. This temple remains one of the two head temples of SÅtÅ Zen in Japan today, the other being
SÅji-ji.
DÅgen spent the remainder of his life teaching and writing at Eiheiji. In 1247, the newly installed
shÅgun's regent,
HÅjÅ Tokiyori, invited DÅgen to come to
Kamakura to teach him. DÅgen made the rather long journey east to provide the shÅgun with lay ordination, and then returned to Eiheiji in 1248. In the autumn of 1252, DÅgen fell ill, and soon showed no signs of recovering. He presented his robes to his main apprentice, Koun EjÅ (å¤é›²æ‡å¼‰), making him the abbot of Eiheiji. Then, at Hatano Yoshishige's invitation, DÅgen left for KyÅto in search of a remedy for his illness. In 1253, soon after arriving in KyÅto, DÅgen died. Shortly before his death, he had written a
death poem:
:Fifty-four years lighting up the sky.
:A quivering leap smashes a billion worlds.
:Hah!
:Entire body looks for nothing.
:Living, I plunge into Yellow Springs.
[13]
DÅgen's Zen
At the heart of the variety of Zen that DÅgen taught are a number of key concepts, which are emphasized repeatedly in his writings. All of these concepts, however, are closely interrelated to one another insofar as they are all directly connected to zazen, or sitting meditation, which DÅgen considered to be identical to Zen, as is pointed out clearly in the first sentence of the 1243 instruction manual "Zazen-gi" (å禪儀; "Principles of Zazen"): "Studying Zen ... is zazen"
[14]. In referring to zazen, DÅgen is most often referring specifically to ''
shikantaza'', roughly translatable as "nothing but precisely sitting", which is a kind of sitting meditation in which the meditator sits "in a state of brightly alert attention that is free of thoughts, directed to no object, and attached to no particular content"
[15].
Oneness of practice-enlightenment
The primary concept underlying DÅgen's Zen practice is "oneness of practice-enlightenment" (ä¿®è‰ä¸€å¦‚ ''shushÅ-ittÅ'' / ''shushÅ-ichinyo''). In fact, this concept is considered so fundamental to DÅgen's variety of Zen—and, consequently, to the SÅtÅ school as a whole—that it formed the basis for the work ''ShushÅ-gi'' (ä¿®è‰å„€), which was compiled in 1890 by Takiya TakushÅ« (æ»è°·å“æ´²) of Eihei-ji and Azegami Baisen (畔上楳仙) of SÅji-ji as an introductory and prescriptive abstract of DÅgen's massive work, the ''
ShÅbÅgenzÅ'' ("Treasury of the Eye of the True Dharma").
For DÅgen, the practice of zazen and the experience of enlightenment were one and the same. This point was succinctly stressed by DÅgen in the ''Fukan Zazengi'', the first text that he composed upon his return to Japan from China: "To practice the Way singleheartedly is, in itself, enlightenment. There is no gap between practice and enlightenment or zazen and daily life"
[16]. Earlier in the same text, the basis of this identity is explained in more detail:
The "oneness of practice-enlightenment" was also a point stressed in the ''BendÅwa'' (å¼é“話 "A Talk on the Endeavor of the Path") of 1231:
Koans
There has long been a debate about how DÅgen may have felt about
koans as they relate to Zen practice. During DÅgen's time, koan work had been boiled down to near meaninglessness. All too often koan answers were simply memorized by monks who otherwise had no clear understanding of their meanings. Teachers also had the tendency to place too great an emphasis on koan work, claiming that koans were the most significant tool one must use to practice Zen.
This latter point is likely what provided DÅgen with the most discomfort, since his vision of ''shikantaza'' being of the utmost importance was at odds with such a claim. However, despite DÅgen's criticisms of koans, one cannot deny the fact that he references hundreds of them in his writings. Both his ''Mana Shobogenzo'' and ''Kana Shobogenzo'' are filled with koans and commentaries on them. It may be safe to say that DÅgen's appreciation for koans was not an endorsement for their systematic presentation into Zen practice. They had a much more intimate quality to him, and were only able to be entered while one was actively engaged in zazen. To DÅgen, zazen was what Zen is truly about. So koans, naturally, could only fully be appreciated when one practiced zazen.
DÅgen was likely unopposed to the use of koans in Zen practice. He just had questions on how they were being used in his lifetime, and did not see them as something that outranks zazen meditation in importance.
Writings

Title page of an 1811 edition of DÅgen's
ShÅbÅgenzÅ
DÅgen's masterpiece is the aforementioned ''ShÅbÅgenzÅ'', talks and writings—collected together in ninety-five
fascicles—on topics ranging from monastic practice to the philosophy of language, being, and time. In the work, as in his own life, DÅgen emphasized the absolute primacy of ''shikantaza'' and the inseparability of practice and enlightenment.
While it was customary for Buddhist works to be written in Chinese, DÅgen often wrote in Japanese, conveying the essence of his thought in a style that was at once concise, compelling, and inspiring. A master stylist, DÅgen is noted not only for his prose, but also for his poetry (in Japanese ''
waka'' style and various Chinese styles). DÅgen's use of language is unconventional by any measure. According to DÅgen scholar
Steven Heine: "Dogen's poetic and philosophical works are characterized by a continual effort to express the inexpressible by perfecting imperfectable speech through the creative use of wordplay, neologism, and lyricism, as well as the recasting of traditional expressions"
[17].
Legacy
DÅgen's most notable successor was
Keizan (瑩山; 1268–1325), founder of
SÅjiji Temple and author of the ''Record of the Transmission of Light'' (傳光錄 ''
DenkÅroku''), which traces the succession of Zen masters from
SiddhÄrtha Gautama up to Keizan's own day. Together, DÅgen and Keizan are regarded as the founders of the SÅtÅ school in Japan.
Notes
1. Tanahashi 3
2. ''Ibid.'' 4
3. Kim 19–20
4. Abe 19–20
5. Tanahashi 4
6. ''Ibid.''
7. ''Ibid.'' 5
8. Tanahashi 6
9. ''Ibid.'' 144
10. ''Ibid.'' 6
11. ''Ibid.'' 39
12. ''Ibid.'' 7
13. Qtd. in Tanahashi, 219
14. "Principles of Zazen"; tr. Bielefeldt, Carl.
15. Kohn 196–197
16. Yukoi 47
17. Heine 1997, 67
References
★ Abe, Masao. ''A Study of DÅgen: His Philosophy and Religion''. Ed. Heine, Steven. Albany: SUNY Press, 1992. ISBN 0-7914-0838-8.
★ Cleary, Thomas. ''Rational Zen: The Mind of Dogen Zenji''. Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc., 1992. ISBN 0-87773-973-0.
★ Dogen. ''The Heart of Dogen's Shobogenzo''. Tr. Waddell, Norman and Abe, Masao. Albany: SUNY Press, 2002. ISBN 0-7914-5242-5.
★ Heine, Steven. ''Dogen and the Koan Tradition: A Tale of Two Shobogenzo Texts''. Albany: SUNY Press, 1994. ISBN 0-7914-1773-5.
★ —. ''The Zen Poetry of Dogen: Verses from the Mountain of Eternal Peace''. Boston: Tuttle Publishing, 1997. ISBN 0-8048-3107-6.
★ Kim, Hee-jin. ''Eihei Dogen, Mystical Realist''. Wisdom Publications, 2004. ISBN 0-86171-376-1.
★ Kohn, Michael H.; tr. ''The Shambhala Dictionary of Buddhism and Zen''. Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc., 1991. ISBN 0-87773-520-4.
★ LaFleur, William R.; ed. ''Dogen Studies''. The Kuroda Institute, 1985. ISBN 0-8248-1011-2.
★ Masunaga, Reiho. ''A Primer of Soto Zen''. University of Hawaii: East-West Center Press, 1978. ISBN 0-7100-8919-8.
★ Okumura, Shohaku; Leighton, Taigen Daniel; et al.; tr. ''The Wholehearted Way: A Translation of Eihei Dogen's Bendowa with Commentary''. Boston: Tuttle Publishing, 1997. ISBN 0-8048-3105-X.
★ Tanahashi, Kazuaki; ed. ''Moon In a Dewdrop: Writings of Zen Master Dogen''. New York: North Point Press, 1997. ISBN 0-86547-186-X.
★ Yokoi, YÅ«hÅ and Victoria, Daizen; tr. ed. ''Zen Master DÅgen: An Introduction with Selected Writings''. New York: Weatherhill Inc., 1990. ISBN 0-8348-0116-7.
External links
★
Dogen Translations Translations of Dogen and other works by Anzan Hoshin.
★ ''
Genjo Koan'', a text written by Dogen (annotated English translation entitled ''Truth Unfolding'')
★
translations of the Shobogenso incomplete, an ongoing project by the Soto Zen Text Project
★
Understanding the Shobogenzo by Gudo Nishijima