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  1. Kōbun Chino Otogawa - Wikipedia. Contents. hide. (Top) Biography. Dharma heirs. Teaching stories. Writings. See also. References. External links. Kōbun Chino Otogawa. Kōbun Otogawa (乙川 弘文, Otogawa Kōbun) (February 1, 1938 – July 26, 2002) [1] was an American Sōtō Zen priest . Biography.

  2. Universidad de Kioto. Komazawa University. Información profesional. Ocupación. Bhikkhu. [ editar datos en Wikidata ] 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.

  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. Houn Kobun Chino Otogawa Roshi – his students and friends simply called him KOBUN – was born on February 1st. 1938 in Kamo, Japan, in his parents’ Zen temple JOKOJI. He was the youngest of six children. After the early loss of his biological father he was adopted by his later master, Hozan Koei Chino Roshi.

  5. 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.

  6. He was also especially fond of Bodhidharma, whose version of the precepts we studied, and of the Sixth Patriarch in China, Hui Neng. Kobun considered the conventional Buddhist distinction between sentient and insentient beings misleading and taught that everything—rocks and trees just as much as humans and animals—was alive and endowed with ...

  7. The book, written by Forbes reporter Caleb Melby and illustrated by JESS3, evolved into an historically inspired tale spanning 30 years of the relationship between Jobs and one of his great...