Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Please Check Out My Latest Post for Buddhadharma: The Practitioner’s Quarterly Online: Remembrances of Dr. Leslie Kawamura by John Harding and Charles Prebish

Dr. Kawamura receiving the Order of the University of Calgary in June 2010.

Earlier in the week, I posted about the recent death of Dr. Leslie Kawamura — one of the titans of modern Buddhist Studies, Professor of Religious Studies and Holder of the Numata Chair in Buddhist Studies at the University of Calgary, and a significant figure in Jodo Shinshu Buddhism in North America. Today, over at Buddhadharma: The Practitioner’s Quarterly Online, I posted interviews I conducted with two men who knew him well: John Harding – Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Lethbridge, and a co-editor of Wild Geese: Buddhism in Canadaand our friend Charles Prebish — the recently-retired Charles Redd Chair in Religious Studies at Utah State University, and author of (among many other important works) Luminous Passage: The Practice and Study of Buddhism in America. Here’s a snippet of my exchange with Chuck:

You were telling me that during your time as Numata Chair, you two 
ate lunch together every day and that “during those hours [you] got
 possibly the best Buddhist education [you've] ever received.” What
 exactly did Dr. Kawamura offer in those hours? How did his teachings
 accentuate the tremendous learning and research you’d already done at 
that point?

The highlight of my time in Calgary was our daily lunches. Usually, around noon, Leslie and I would meet in his office, often with other faculty members and students included, and just brainstorm about all things Buddhist. Nothing was ever pre-planned. We just spontaneously discussed whatever came up on any specific day. It didn’t matter whether it was Vinaya or Vimalakirti, monasticism or meditation, the discussions were lively and free-spirited.

Read the rest here.

Happy Ohigan!

Today is Ohigan, a Japanese Buddhist holiday that takes place during the spring and autumn equinoxes. Don’t miss Arun’s interview about the meaning and importance of the holiday with The Nenju‘s Rev. Harry Gyokyo Bridge over at Angry Asian Buddhist.

[UPDATE: USA Today has an article about this spring's Ohigan in light of the Japanese earthquake and Pacific tsunami.]

“Memorial Service for Those Who Have Died in Japanese Disaster”

Dosho Port offers a plan for a service at Wild Fox Zen. It’s well worth a look regardless of your personal Buddhist affiliation.

A Gift of Dharma for 3.17.11

Today’s dharma quote is yet another from the Vidyādhara, Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche (1939-1987), whom I first quoted and wrote a little bio for hereThis is it:

A critical attitude towards oneself doesn’t mean that you have to be hateful of yourself. The critical attitude can be accompanied by compassion and warmth. All your polarities are equally valid, whether weakness or strength. There’s no point in splitting your basic being into several parts and trying to suppress certain parts and cultivate others. If we don’t have allegiance toward samsara or nirvana, then we free ourselves from any dogma, any bondage. Some sense of ultimate relaxation begins to occur.

NEWS: Protests After Tibetan Monk Immolates Self in China

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This from The New York Times:

A Tibetan monk in Sichuan Province tried committing suicide on Wednesday by setting himself on fire to protest Chinese rule in Tibetan areas, according to two Tibet advocacy groups, International Campaign for Tibet and Free Tibet, based outside China. The fate of the monk, Phuntsog, was unclear by nighttime, but there were rumors he had died. He was the second monk at Kirti Monastery to protest Chinese policies through self-immolation. In 2009, another monk did the same, but survived. This month is the third anniversary of an uprising against Chinese rule that rippled across Tibetan areas in March 2008. Kirti Monastery was a center of protests in Sichuan.

The BBC reports that the incident has subsequently “sparked protests” in the region.