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  1. Kōbun Otogawa (乙川 弘文, Otogawa Kōbun) (February 1, 1938 – July 26, 2002) was an American Sōtō Zen priest.

  2. Kōbun Chino Otogawa (乙川 弘文, Otogawa Kōbun) (1 de febrero de 1938-26 de julio de 2002) fue un sacerdote Sōtō Zen japonés nacionalizado estadounidense. Biografía

  3. Kobun Chino Otogawa, Chief Priest of Jikoji, came to America in 1967 from Eiheiji Monastery in Japan. After serving as the resident teacher at Tassajara Monastery for two years, Kobun Roshi became the Chief Priest of Haiku Zendo in Los Altos, California.

  4. Kobun was re-adopted into the Otokawa lineage and he took that name. Consequently his first two children have the name 'Chino' and the second family has the name 'Otogawa'. In the 1990s Kobun returned to Japan and reconciled with his old master, Chino Roshi.

  5. Kobun was a Zen priest and master of ceremonies. However, at heart he was an artist, a painter, calligrapher, poet, Shakuhachi player; he practiced Kyudo (jap. archery), liked to cook, was a good and fearless skier, a healer and astrologer, …. and was broke most of the time, even though some very wealthy people were his students.

  6. Kobun Chino Otogawa & Shunryu Suzuki at Tassajara In 1967, the San Francisco Zen Center purchased property and established a monastery at Tassajara Hot Springs.

  7. Kobun Chino Otogawa Roshi. Dated Draft of Biography. With Added Links and Other Resources. Born February 1, 1938 into the Otogawa family, a family including a lineage of priests in the little town of Kamo in Niigata prefecture in Northwest Japan at the family temple, Jokoji, Kobun was the youngest of six children.