A long line of mourners wound its way up the hill behind Zen Mountain Monastery (ZMM) in New York’s Catskill Mountains on a stark November morning. We gathered to inter the ashes of John Daido Loori, one of the native-born, Euro-American dharma teachers who emerged in the 1980s as leaders of a new American Buddhism. Born in 1931, Loori was a part of the so-called Beat generation. In his late thirties, he began to study photography under Minor White and to practice Buddhism with a number of teachers, most importantly Taizan Maezumi, who founded the Zen Center of Los Angeles, an important practice center that emerged in the midst of the cultural revolutions of the Sixties. Loori once described himself to me as a Buddhist “radical conservative,” which was shorthand for saying he admired aspects of the monastic traditions of Japan even as he thoroughly reinterpreted them to suit the needs of Zen-minded Americans.
Daido’s life spanned the Beat and Hip generations, which together have placed an indelible mark on Buddhism in the United States. Attending his funeral became a natural opportunity for me to reflect on how the American Buddhist scene had evolved since around 1990, when I first began to immerse myself in research for the original edition of this book.
At that time, one major story was how, in a few short decades, Buddhism had been transformed from a diffuse spiritual interest pursued primarily through books into a mass movement grounded in face-to-face encounters between Asian teachers and American students. At least since the nineteenth century, Buddhism had been trickling into American culture in a kind of free-floating dharma discourse by way of texts such as Paul Carus’s Gospel of the Buddha and Dwight Goddard’s Buddhist Bible. Americans also became familiar with Buddhism, particularly Zen, through literary expressions like the haiku, practices such as martial arts and the tea ceremony, and architecture and the fine arts. A major leap forward occurred in the 1950s with the publications of works by D. T. Suzuki, Jack Kerouac, Alan Watts, and others now associated with the Beat fascination with Buddhism. Before historians had unearthed Victorian Buddhism, the Buddhist contingent at the World’s Parliament of Religions, and the work of a few very early pioneering teachers, many observers considered the Beat poets to be the quintessential expression of American Buddhism.
Then, quite suddenly, beginning in the late 1960s, Americans became intensely interested in the practice of Buddhism, whether chanting in the Nichiren style or seated meditation as taught in the Zen, Theravada, and Tibetan traditions. Seemingly overnight, something new appeared on the American spiritual landscape—a large number and wide range of vibrant Buddhist institutions. They gave a concrete, social foundation to an emergent, hybrid spiritual movement that was part dharma traditions of Asia and part American enthusiasm, idealism, and innovation.
Light snow fell as the line of a hundred or so mourners made its way into a pine grove near the crest of the hill, where there is a burial ground for the ZMM community, an image of Shakyamuni teaching, and a stupa dedicated to Taizan Maezumi, the monastery’s first abbot. The somber mood of the crowd was cross-cut by a sense that this was also a homecoming for many of Daido’s students, members and affiliates of the Mountains and Rivers Order, one of the many U.S.-born lineages that now comprise the growing ranks of America’s serious Buddhists.
After having studied and practiced for years, many new Buddhists like Loori became authorized to teach—Loori himself in 1986 by Taizan Maezumi. As they established their own teaching centers, American Buddhism grew exponentially, giving rise to a “convert community.” One characteristic institution of this new community was the “dharma center,” a practice hall more than social center, where people could meditate in styles derived from Asian monastic traditions that were being substantively altered to suit the needs of the baby boom generation, who had begun to take conventional jobs and raise middle-class families. After weathering a series of leadership crises in the 1980s, the convert community began to promote what was seen to be a uniquely American dharma in the 1990s. At that time, Buddhism in the United States was hailed as something new—more egalitarian and democratic than Asian Buddhism, more oriented to social activism and open to the interests and aspirations of women. It was seen to be free of the reified ritualism of Asia, unhampered by Asian clericalism, and thoroughly open to the social and emotional needs of American laity.
Today Buddhist rhetoric has shifted in subtle but significant ways. There is less talk of American Buddhism’s unique character and more about deep currents of Westernization and globalization that drive near-universal processes of change and transformation. Many modernist aspects of contemporary Buddhism are now understood to have arisen first in Asia in response to Western incursions during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This modernizing Buddhism was then exported to the West by Asian teachers, where it was further transformed as it was repackaged for Western consumption. Doubly modernized, Western Buddhism is now bouncing back east to drive further transformations of Buddhism in Asia and around the globe.
This shift in rhetoric marks both a shedding of American parochialism and a maturing of convert Buddhists’ self-understanding. The Buddhist movement in the United States is larger, deeper, and more stable than it was twenty years ago, and more confident about its direction and goals. There is less self-celebratory astonishment at its accomplishments and less anxious need expressed about asserting its independence from Asian sources. There is also a more seasoned conviction that Buddhists have a salutary role to play in the crises facing the contemporary world in terms of both sustainable social values and religious practice that can ameliorate human suffering. Having dedicated well over thirty years to the assiduous practice of Buddhism, founding and funding institutions, and establishing national and international networks of colleagues, disciples, and friends, the convert community seems to have hit its stride. With Buddhist children and grandchildren now being born into the dharma, it is technically no longer a convert community but a naturalized feature on the spiritual landscape of America and the West.
But questions that emerged several decades ago about there being “two Buddhisms” in the United States—convert and immigrant—persist as a prominent, apparently perennial feature of the community. Like Euro-American converts, most Asian American Buddhist communities have their roots in the pivotal decade of the 1960s. As a result of a change in immigration law in 1965, Asian immigration soared and by the 1980s substantial Buddhist communities grounded in many national and regional traditions thrived in states from New York to California, Texas, and Illinois.
As was the case two decades ago, there remains today a lack of substantive communication between Euro-American and immigrant communities. It appears that religious sensibilities function so differently in the two groups that both have accepted the fact that there is little common ground between them. Euro-Americans embraced the dharma as a revolutionary spiritual alternative with the convert’s classic zeal, and they continue to conceive of their engagement with it in world-transforming terms. Immigrant religion, however, tends to be infused with the more intimate concerns of memory, solace, and spiritual practice grounded in ethnic, linguistic, and ancestral identity, which profoundly shapes these communities’ approach to the American mainstream. In them, ongoing institutional links to Asia remain influential, even as second and third generations emerge who are, technically speaking, no longer immigrants.
There is evidence that these two very different Buddhist communities are moving toward each other, fitfully. Observers note that lay immigrants are taking up elements typical of Westernized Buddhism and that some converts display an appreciation for liturgical activities once dismissed as too Asian and ritualistic. But the public voice of American Buddhism remains overwhelmingly that of Euro-Americans, who often proceed as if oblivious to immigrants as an intrinsic part of America’s emerging Buddhism. How these two communities will interact in the future production of a Westernized and Americanized dharma, which eventually they must, remains an imponderable question that will require more decades to puzzle out.
I traveled to Zen Mountain Monastery from Santa Fe to pay my respects to Loori because he was one of my major informants on the Zen Buddhist scene. But as I mingled with the many people who converged on ZMM that bitterly cold morning, I realized that I had also come to regard him as a friend. Over the course of several years, Daido and I talked often, not only about his own development but also about his hopes for the American dharma in the twenty-first century. We discussed our shared Roman Catholic formation, an element of his style that contributed to his elegant presence as liturgist when he led public sittings for Woodstock tourists who frequented ZMM’s zendo on summer Sunday mornings. I valued Loori’s view that the crucified Christ so prominent on the impressive craftsman-style stone zendo—once the Catholic church for a camp serving New York City youth—must surely be a bodhisattva. Loori also became a confidant of sorts at the passing of my wife, Ann, and I still fondly recall his gentle counsels to me about life, death, and impermanence inspired by Dogen’s Genjo Koan during a dinner we shared just a week after her shockingly sudden death.
After graveside ceremonies for Loori, the assembled visitors retreated to a nearby inn for a meal and postmortem, but I absented myself, instead driving to Woodstock to make a brief visit to KTD, Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, where I’d also conducted hours of research. Like Zen Mountain Monastery, KTD has grown substantially and is now a formidable U.S. Buddhist institution, the North American seat of the Gyalwa Karmapa, the head of the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism. When I first visited KTD, the question of succession to the office of the Gyalwa Karmapa was in dispute following the death of the Sixteenth Karmapa, Rangjung Rigpe Dorje, in 1981 in a Chicago suburb. The simultaneous recognition and enthronement of two young candidates threatened a schism in the worldwide Kagyu community. KTD backed Ogyen Trinley Dorje, who in 2008 was finally able to travel from Nepal, where he lives in the Tibetan community in exile, to his Woodstock seat, an event that marked for that community a pivotal, ceremonial moment in the history of Buddhism coming West.
As I wandered the grounds of KTD’s mountaintop compound viewing the results of their building campaigns, I was struck again by how American Buddhism has grown with such rapidity and gained such institutional complexity. During the enthusiasm of the Nineties, it was often said that the movement of Buddhism to the United States marked another “turning of the wheel of dharma,” a metaphor used to designate a few major turning points in the religion’s long Asian past. Scholars of that ancient history have long studied the adaptation of the dharma to cultures across Asia through texts, literature, art, and archaeological excavations. For them it was an exciting opportunity to witness a wholly new, New World expression of that process firsthand. For historians of American religion, Buddhism coming West was a culmination of a century and a half of American seekers pursuing alternative spiritual inspiration in the East, a process that began with the New England Transcendentalists. For scholars in either camp who followed developments—the arrival of dozens of regional and national Buddhist traditions on American ground almost simultaneously, the impact of Asian politics on the process of transmission, the arcane doctrinal disputes and institutional adaptations—the spectacle was breathtaking.
In the first edition of Buddhism in America, I wrote that the variety and richness of the Buddhist traditions taking root in the United States militated against a definitive statement about what American Buddhism is and what it will become in the future. Despite important developments over the last two decades, this still appears to be largely the case, so I intend to argue only a modestly revisionist thesis. Several decades ago, the major story in American Buddhism was the way a free-floating dharma discourse—the book and arts-oriented Buddhism noted above—was becoming grounded in a wide range of new dharma institutions. For that reason, I emphasized the differences among selected traditions, some of their distinctive traits, practices, and vocabularies, and how these were beginning to take on institutional shape. Today this institutionalization process continues apace, but so too does the dissemination of powerful, free-floating dharma discourses. The two new essays at the beginning of parts 2 and 3 are a selective update of the American Buddhist scene today, with attention both to progress within institutional Buddhism and to the ongoing role of dharma discourses in the culture at large.